EFAMA believes that IORPs should be able to invest in financial instruments traded in all third country markets where the latter meet certain conditions, regardless of the adoption of an equivalence decision by the Commission (...).
Pension provision inadequacy will remain a major challenge for Member States and European citizens, particularly in light of Europe’s ageing population and the impact of the Covid-19 crisis on government debt levels. Promoting retirement savings should become a major priority for policymakers, at the national and European level. This would not only support the future financial well-being of citizens but also contribute to strengthening of the Capital Markets Union.
EFAMA strongly supported the Commission’s proposal to create a pan-European Personal Pension Product (PEPP). We will evaluate the development of the market in the coming years and, if necessary, develop proposals for amending the PEPP Regulation. EFAMA will continue to take part in any relevant consultations on pension issues, to ensure the position of our industry is taken into account. We will continue raising public awareness on the importance of saving for retirement, including by playing an active role in the launch of a European Retirement Week, the first edition of which will take in 2021 during the week starting on 29 November. Finally, we will keep a close eye on the IORP Directive and contribute to its review.
EFAMA believes that IORPs should be able to invest in financial instruments traded in all third country markets where the latter meet certain conditions, regardless of the adoption of an equivalence decision by the Commission (...).
EFAMA responded to one particular section of the Green Paper on Ageing published by the European Commission.
Members of the Pension Standing Committee addressed the following questions: What role could supplementary pensions play in ensuring adequate retirement incomes? How could they be extended throughout the EU and what would be the EU’s role in this process?
They recommend actions in four specific areas:
EFAMA welcomes the proposed revised OECD Roadmap. We would like to congratulate the OECD team working on private pensions for the wide-ranging research projects it undertook over the past years, which provided sound, evidence-based arguments to update the 2012 Roadmap.
We strongly support the main messages of the Roadmap, in particular the importance of
The investment industry and policymakers must co-ordinate efforts to promote funded retirement savings and improve financial literacy to ensure that billions of people can live comfortably in their later years and, in the process, ease the fiscal pressure on governments. Financially-literate individuals are more likely to make better-informed financial decisions and to understand the benefits of long-term investments.
The preliminary programme of the inaugural European Retirement Week was presented today. The week will begin with a launch event on 29 November, featuring a keynote speech by Mairead McGuinness, European Commissioner for in the Financial Services, Financial Stability and the Capital Markets Union.
A group of nine European associations has announced the launch of European Retirement Week, which will take place during the week of 29 November 2021. The goal of this initiative is to provide a platform for a wide range of stakeholders to debate the future of pensions in Europe and to raise citizens’ awareness of the need to save for retirement.
Above all, the PEPP is a recognition of the importance of individual pension savings at a time
in which European governments have become increasingly fiscally constrained. This has
consequences both for state pension provision and for wider investment in the European
economy.
This publication precedes the European Commission's forthcoming new Action Plan on the Capital Markets Union (CMU). It includes ten concrete policy recommendations to help advance the CMU, including the introduction of a Key Performance Indicator (KPI) to monitor progress in household participation in capital markets.