INTOSAI Key challenges to Supreme Audit Institutions as regards the EU- Lisbon Process Ulrike MANDL, ACA The 3rd OECD World Forum on Statistics, Knowledge.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Why does ERA Need to Flourish
Advertisements

EU Presidency Conference Effective policies for the development of competencies of youth in Europe Warsaw, November 2011 Improving basic skills in.
1 Promoting Adequate and Sustainable Pensions through the Open Method of Coordination Presentation by the European Commission Tallinn, 12 November 2003.
Strengthening innovation in chemical clusters
Using public procurement to foster research and innovation More Research and Innovation COM(2005) 488 of 12 October 2005 Commission communication to the.
Commission européenne The European Employment Strategy within the new Lisbon agenda Boosting Growth and Jobs in Europe Safeguarding the European.
STRUMENTI DI SVILUPPO LOCALE E DELLIMPRENDITORIALITA SOCIAL INCLUSION IN THE TIME OF CRISIS Dr Emma Clarence OECD LEED Trento Centre.
International Approaches to Labour Migration GTZ conference on Migration and Labour, Berlin 12 June 2007 Louka T. Katseli, Director, OECD Development Centre.
Cordoba, 2010 Claudio Spadon
European Economic and Social Committee Consultative Committee on Industrial Change "CCMI" P r e s e n t a t i o n of J á n o s T Ó T H Member of the EESC.
Title INNOVATION PERFORMANCE. The Lisbon strategy for growth and jobs and EU regional policy DG REGIO.
1 Reflections on the future Cohesion Policy DG Regional Policy European Commission.
1 The new ESF Investing in your Future -
DG REGIO – Unit "Thematic Development" EUROPEAN COMMISSION EN 1 Transport and Regional Policy Transport and Regional Policy Patrick.
EU-Regional Policy Structural actions 1 GROWING EVALUATION CAPACITY THE MID TERM EVALUATION IN OBJECTIVE 1 AND 2 REGIONS 8 OCTOBER 2004.
Draft Joint Employment Report 2013 Lars Michael Engsted DG Employment, Social Affairs and Inclusion.
Community Strategic Guidelines DG AGRI, October 2005 Rural Development.
1 7 th Progress Report: The regional and urban dimension of Europe 2020 Lewis Dijkstra Deputy Head of the Analysis Unit DG for Regional Policy European.
EN Regional Policy EUROPEAN COMMISSION Community Strategic Guidelines for cohesion
Bruselas, 11 de octubre de 2005 Iñaki Beristain Etxabe Head of the Economy & Planning PRESENT & FUTURE FOR THE OBJECTIVE OF COMPETITIVENESS & EMPLOYMENT:
1 EU Strategy for the Baltic Sea Region Anders Lindholm European Commission DG Regional Policy, Territorial Cooperation.
Regional Policy EUROPEAN COMMISSION Open Days EU Instruments for RTD and Innovation: the Structural Funds Christine Mason REGIO.C1 EUROPEAN COMMISSION.
DG Education and Culture New generation of programmes Marco DI MARTINO Information officer Athens, 7 December 2006.
Community Strategic Guidelines DG AGRI, July 2005 Rural Development.
Target setting for the SEE 2020 strategy Jahorina, Bosnia and Herzegovina September 11 th
European Commission Directorate-General Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities New Skills for New Jobs Annual Northern Ireland Skills Conference.
Roma education: the role of the Structural Funds Policy Framework.
Evaluating administrative and institutional capacity building
INTERNATIONAL LABOUR ORGANISATION SUPPORTING SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC COUNCILS WITHIN THE REGION: THE ILO EXPERIENCE 1.
Structural and cohesion funds and the European Semester process –experiences from the past, lessons for the future for the European Structural and Investment.
Active employment policies IN EUROPEAN UNION AND GREECE
Leveraging the impact of climate finance through MDBs Ko Sakamoto Transport Economist Asian Development Bank.
Anna Drozd Policy advisor, EUROCITIES Newcastle 21 February 2014 EU transnational programmes related to employment – EaSI, Horizon 2020 and Erasmus+
European Conference Measuring well being and fostering the progress of Societies OECD-eFrame-European Commission 28 June 2012 Around the EU Agnès HUBERT.
Dorotea Daniele, Facilitator. The members Polish Ministry of Regional Development ESF Council in Sweden Lombardy Region Ministry of Labour and Social.
Cyprus Project Management Society
The Lisbon strategy and the Hungarian employment strategy László Kordás 29 April 2006 Balatongyörök.
Key National Indicators and Supreme Audit Institutions: U.S. and INTOSAI Perspectives Bernice Steinhardt Director, Strategic Issues U.S. Government Accountability.
National Employment Strategy as a response to the challenges of the Polish labour market Budapest, 20 October 2005.
Session 3. National Employment Strategies and Policies: The International Context Makiko Matsumoto Employment Strategy Department, ILO 25 May 2004, Turin.
How the European Social Fund can contribute to social enterprises? Workshop 7: Structural funds (ESF, ERDF) for social enterprises Strasbourg, 16 January.
21 JUNE 2005EDEN CONFERENCE1 THE CHALLENGE OF LEARNING IN THE 21st CENTURY STRATEGIES VISIONS REALITIES IN A GLOBAL POLICY CONTEXT WERNER P. HERRMANN.
GHANA’S AGENDA FOR SHARED GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT,
Riga – Latvia, 4 & 5 December 2006
Strategic Framework for European cooperation in education and training
European Social Fund Cohesion Policy EU cohesion policy & social economy Dominique Bé, European Commission Worker ownership: the synthesis between.
A new start for the Lisbon Strategy Knowledge and innovation for growth.
THE GOVERNMENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF SLOVENIA INSTITUTE OF MACROECONOMIC ANALYSIS AND DEVELOPMENT July 2007 Where is Lisbon? (and how far is it from Ljubljana)
European Commission Introduction to the Community Programme for Employment and Social Solidarity PROGRESS
1 Making labour market reform deliver more and better jobs: The Spanish case ETUC Brussels March 2006 Jorge Aragón Comisiones Obreras (CC.OO.-Spain)
Objectives, Priorities and Concepts. OPERATIONAL PROGRAMME Operational Programme outlines the framework, strategy and management of the programme for.
│ 1│ 1 What are we talking about?… Culture: Visual Arts, Performing Arts, Heritage Literature Cultural Industries: Film and Video, Television and radio,
Europe 2020 Latest developments Anette Björnsson European Commission, DG EMPL.
Conference on regional governance in a global context The experience of Emilia Romagna Morena Diazzi Managing Authority ERDF ROP
1 Cohesion Policy and demography By Ronald Hall Director Directorate-General for Regional Policy 28 April 2010.
COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES Brussels, COMMUNICATION TO THE SPRING EUROPEAN COUNCIL Working together for growth and jobs A new start.
COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES Brussels, COMMUNICATION TO THE SPRING EUROPEAN COUNCIL Working together for growth and jobs A new start.
POINTS COMMUNICATION TO THE SPRING EUROPEAN COUNCIL Working together for growth and jobs A new start for the Lisbon Strategy POINTS
EUROPEAN SOCIAL FUND EQUAL - The European Perspective EQUAL Initiative EQUAL The European Perspective Dublin - 25 September 2003 Ian Livingstone European.
1 Moving Towards a Knowledge-Based Economy: Progress Made Since the Lisbon EU Summit Knowledge Economy Forum III Budapest, March 23-26, 2004 Franz Kaps,
Evaluation of the ESF contribution to the European Employment Strategy (EES) Undertaken in 2009 and 2010 – i.e. Lisbon Strategy as the reference point.
Commission européenne EU Employment Strategy for people with Disabilities Final Conference Conversion Strasbourg, 21 Sept Egbert Holthuis European.
Assessing the capacity of the Agenda 2020 to to carry ‘social investment’ ideals Joakim Palme Institute for Futures Studies
Approaches and instruments for sustainable rural development
PRIORITIES in the area of employment and social policy during the Bulgarian Presidency of the Council of the European Union 1 January – 30.
Private sector development and SDGs in Albania
Roberto Barcellan European Commission - Eurostat
Annual Growth Survey and Draft Joint Employment Report 2012
Investment in Human Capital and The revised Lisbon strategy March 2005
From ‘Lisbon’ to Europe 2020: a new design of the reporting cycle and how to link it to the ESF ESF Evaluation Partnership Working Group on the ESF contribution.
Presentation transcript:

INTOSAI Key challenges to Supreme Audit Institutions as regards the EU- Lisbon Process Ulrike MANDL, ACA The 3rd OECD World Forum on Statistics, Knowledge and Policy Charting Progress, Building Visions, Improving Life Busan, Korea October 2009

INTOSAI Folie 1 OVERVIEW I. The Lisbon Strategy for Growth and Jobs II. Structural Indicators as Key National Indicators III. Role and Key Challenges of SAI

INTOSAI Folie 2 I.The Lisbon Strategy for Growth and Jobs In 2000, Heads of States and Governments launched the Lisbon Strategy Benchmarking as means of improving the implementation record of structural reforms increased

INTOSAI Folie 3 II.Structural Indicators as Key National Indicators Structural Indicators Instrument to align the national policies with the overall EU goals Indicators should help to communicate complex issues and highlight interlinkages and trade-offs Peer pressure and mutual learning through information sharing among the policy makers at national level should be achieved.

INTOSAI Folie 4 II.Structural Indicators as Key National Indicators GDP per capita in PPS Labour productivity per person employed Innovation and Research Youth education attainment level by gender Gross domestic expenditure on R&D (GERD) Comparative price levels Business investment Employment rate by gender Employment rate of older workers by gender At-risk-of-poverty rate after social transfers by gender Long-term unemployment rate by gender Dispersion of regional employment rates by gender Greenhouse gas emissions Energy intensity of the economyVolume of freight transport relative to GDP

INTOSAI Folie 5 III.Role and Key Challenges of SAI Challenges SAI`s Involvment vs SAI`s independence Data availability Data comparability Measurement problems

INTOSAI Folie 6 III.Role and Key Challenges of SAI Role of SAI 1. SAI could provide information to contribute to Lisbon-type structural reforms –Provide information on gains and costs of reforms –Outline opportunity costs of no-policy-change –Identify cost drivers

INTOSAI Folie 7 Role and Key Challenges of SAI Ex. Pension Reform in Austria - Highlighting opportinity costs!

INTOSAI Folie 8 III.Role and Key Challenges of SAI Role of SAI 2. SAI could provide context information as regards key national indicators –Evaluate country specifics (social system, public transfers, etc.) to ease the design of indicators –Provide additional performance information to support decision making on KNI

INTOSAI Folie 9 Conclusion SAI could mobilise its own instruments to contibute to the needed information to trigger structural reforms. SAI could help to overcome data and measurement problems as audits could deliver the missing link of information needed to rely on KNI.

INTOSAI Folie 10 Thank you very much for your Attention!

INTOSAI Folie 11 Background Information

INTOSAI Folie 12 II.Structural Indicators as Key National Indicators 24 Integrated Guidelines Broad Economic Policy Guidelines (BEPGs) and Emplyment Guidelines Macroeconomic guidelines (1) To secure economic stability. (2) To safeguard economic and fiscal sustainability. (3) To promote a growth- and employment-orientated and efficient allocation of resources. (4) To secure economic stability for sustainable growth. (5) To ensure that wage developments contribute to macroeconomic stability and growth. (6) To contribute to a dynamic and well-functioning EMU.

INTOSAI Folie 13 II.Structural Indicators as Key National Indicators 24 Integrated Guidelines Broad Economic Policy Guidelines (BEPGs) and Emplyment Guidelines Microeconomic guidelines (7) To increase and improve investment in R & D, in particular by private business. (8) To facilitate all forms of innovation. (9) To facilitate the spread and effective use of ICT and build a fully inclusive information society. (10) To strengthen the competitive advantages of its industrial base. (11) To encourage the sustainable use of resources and strengthen the synergies between environmental protection and growth. (12) To extend and deepen the internal market. (13) To ensure open and competitive markets inside and outside Europe and to reap the benefits of globalisation. (14) To create a more competitive business environment and encourage private initiative through better regulation. (15) To promote a more entrepreneurial culture and create a supportive environment for SMEs. (16) To expand, improve and link up European infrastructure and complete priority cross-border projects.

INTOSAI Folie 14 II.Structural Indicators as Key National Indicators 24 Integrated Guidelines Broad Economic Policy Guidelines (BEPGs) and Emplyment Guidelines Employment guidelines (17) Implement employment policies aiming at achieving full employment, improving quality and productivity at work, and strengthening social and territorial cohesion. (18) Promote a life-cycle approach to work. (19) Ensure inclusive labour markets, enhance work attractiveness, and make work pay for job-seekers, including disadvantaged people, and the inactive. (20) Improve matching of labour market needs. (21) Promote flexibility combined with employment security and reduce labour market segmentation, having due regard to the role of the social partners. (22) Ensure employment-friendly labour cost developments and wage-setting mechanisms. (23) Expand and improve investment in human capital. (24) Adapt education and training systems in response to new competence requirements.

INTOSAI Folie 15 Organisation Chart

INTOSAI Folie 16 4 Goals Strategic Plan of INTOSAI Goal 1: Accountability and Professional Standards Goal 2: Institutional Capacity Building Goal 3:Knowledge Sharing and Knowledge Services Goal 4:Model International Organisation

INTOSAI Folie 17 Goal 3 TF Financial Crisis – USA

INTOSAI Folie Websites