New Commission report assesses European trade strengths in a changing global economy

Biudžetas
A new report by the European Commission has assessed the competitiveness of the European Union in the global economy at the end of a decade of rapid economic change. Since the mid-1990s, there has been a major redistribution of market share between emerging and developed countries and among developed countries themselves. In this highly competitive environment, the EU has broadly maintained its world market share, while the US and Japan have lost ground. The EU remains the world's biggest exporter of manufactured goods, and dominates markets for high-quality products. The report warns, however, that the EU must focus on investment in its high-technology manufacturing and continue to improve its market share in the fast growing economies of Asia. The report reinforces the economic arguments behind the launch of the European Commission's Global Europe trade policy framework in 2006.

Key elements of the report:

The European Commission's Global Europe trade policy framework was launched in 2006. Global Europe is based on the argument that Europe's economic strength is rooted in access to imports for manufacturing and the competitiveness of its exports in the global economy. Global Europe refocused the priorities of EU trade policy to reflect this. These included: ensuring an open markets for imports into the EU; improving market access for EU exporters, especially in the growing markets of Asia, both through targeted work to tackle individual trade barriers and through a global trade deal and a new generation of Free Trade Agreements with Asian economies; action to improve the protection of intellectual property rights globally, which is vital to European companies that have invested heavily in design and innovation. This report strongly reinforces the economic rationale behind the Global Europe framework.