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Council of the 
 
 

 European Union 
   
 
Brussels, 16 November 2015 
(OR. en) 
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COMPET 513 

 
 
ECOFIN 848 
UEM 402 
 
NOTE 
From: 
Presidency 
To: 
Permanent Representatives Committee/Council 
Subject: 
Preparation of the Competitiveness Council of 30 November and 1 
December 2015 
Recommendation by the Commission for a Council Recommendation on 
the Establishment of National Competitiveness Boards within the Euro-
area 

Presentation by the Commission  

Exchange of views 
 
 
 
Delegations will find attached a Presidency background paper on the Recommendation by the 
Commission for a Council Recommendation on the Establishment of National Competitiveness 
Boards within the Euro-area. 
 
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link to page 2 link to page 2 ANNEX 
Commission Recommendation on the Establishment of National Competitiveness Boards 
Presidency Background Paper 
Context 
On 21 October 2015, the Commission adopted a package of measures to further strengthen and 
deepen the Economic and Monetary Union (EMU), one of the ten main priorities of the 
Commission. 
The package follows up on the Five Presidents’ Report1, published in June 2015, in which the five 
Presidents – Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, together with the President of the 
European Council, Donald Tusk, the President of the Eurogroup, Jeroen Dijsselbloem, the 
President of the European Central Bank, Mario Draghi, and the President of the European 
Parliament, Martin Schulz – set out plans as to how to deepen the Economic and Monetary Union 
and how to complete it by 2025 at the latest. 
The EMU package includes a Commission recommendation on the establishment of National 
Competitiveness Boards2, in which the Commission invites the Member States to set up 
independent bodies – the Competitiveness Boards – that would be tasked to track how wages, 
prices, productivity, innovation and other competitiveness factors evolve within the Member States. 
The Competitiveness Boards are also meant to contribute to the ex-post evaluation of policies 
relating to competitiveness and to formulate policy advice. 
Furthermore, each Competitiveness Board would be expected to publish an annual report 
summarising its analysis and policy advice. They should also be in regular contact with the 
competitiveness boards of other Member States as well as with the Commission, which should facilitate 
coordination between them. 
                                                 
1 
http://ec.europa.eu/priorities/economic-monetary-union/docs/5-presidents-report_en.pdf 

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Although the Commission recommendation is addressed to Euro-area members only, the other EU 
Member States are also encouraged to set up such bodies.
Previous discussions on the Five Presidents’ report 
The idea to create bodies tasked with monitoring competitiveness at national level was already 
included in the Five Presidents’ Report, which referred to the setting-up of Competitiveness 
Authorities that would have a mandate to assess in particular “whether wages are evolving in line 
with productivity and compare with developments in other euro area countries and in the main 
comparable trading partners
”. Compared to the content of the Five Presidents’ report, the mandate 
of the Competitiveness Boards proposed in the Commission recommendation, as described above, 
is formulated in a broader manner and takes into account other competitiveness factors. 
Within the remit of the Competitiveness Council, the High Level Group on Competitiveness and 
Growth (HLG) had a debate specifically on the idea to set up Competitiveness Authorities4 at its 
meeting on 13 October 2015. 
At the HLG meeting, the principle of setting up new Competitiveness Authorities was received with 
scepticism by almost all delegations. Doubts were raised in particular regarding: 
– 
the need and the added value of creating an additional body on top of existing structures 
and mechanisms at national level, which already fulfil similar tasks and which are often 
based on national traditions 
– 
the risk of creating delays in policy making by adding another layer to the existing 
decision making processes 
– 
the scope of the Competitiveness Authorities’ activities and the issues that they are 
supposed to solve (lack of a clear problem definition) 
– 
the emphasis put on monitoring national wage setting mechanisms – instead of focusing 
on other factors having a significant impact on competitiveness 
                                                 
3 
See Recital 1 of the recommendation. 

As referred to in the Five Presidents’ report. 
 
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Similar criticisms were voiced during the discussions within the ECOFIN and EPSCO Council 
formations. 
Debate at the Competitiveness Council 
The Competitiveness Council has a mandate to monitor all horizontal and sector-specific issues 
relating to competitiveness, including the implementation of micro-economic reforms at national 
level. 
The Presidency therefore finds it essential that the Competitiveness Council provides its input to the 
ongoing debate on the EMU package led by the ECOFIN Council, in particular as regards the 
recommendation regarding the setting-up of National Competitiveness Boards. 
Building on the previous discussions on the Five Presidents’ report, held notably in the HLG, 
Ministers are invited to consider the following questions in particular:  
– 
Does the Commission recommendation on the setting-up of national Competitiveness Boards 
sufficiently take into account the issues and concerns raised by delegations in previous 
discussions? 

– 
Do the Member States generally agree with the need to set up national Competitiveness 
boards, based on the concept and the roles of the Competitiveness Boards described in the 
Commission recommendation?
 
Next steps 
The Presidency will communicate the main results of the Competitiveness Council debate to the 
Chair of the ECOFIN formation of the Council. 
The Prime Minister of Luxembourg will then send a letter summing up the discussions on the EMU 
package to the President of the European Council in view of the 17-18 December 2015 meeting of 
the European Council. 
 
 
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Document Outline