REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL on the application of Annex XI to the Staff Regulations and Article 66a thereof - Main contents
Contents
Document date | 07-01-2019 |
---|---|
Publication date | 08-01-2019 |
Reference | 5027/19 |
From | Secretary-General of the European Commission, signed by Mr Jordi AYET PUIGARNAU, Director |
External link | original article |
Original document in PDF |
Council of the European Union
Brussels, 7 January 2019 (OR. en)
5027/19
STAT 2 FIN 3
COVER NOTE
From: Secretary-General of the European Commission, signed by Mr Jordi AYET PUIGARNAU, Director
date of receipt: 14 December 2018
To: Mr Jeppe TRANHOLM-MIKKELSEN, Secretary-General of the Council of the European Union
No. Cion doc.: COM(2018) 830 final
Subject: REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL on the application of Annex XI to the Staff
Regulations and Article 66a thereof
Delegations will find attached document COM(2018) 830 final.
Encl.: COM(2018) 830 final
EUROPEAN COMMISSION
Brussels, 14.12.2018 COM(2018) 830 final
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL
on the application of Annex XI to the Staff Regulations and Article 66a thereof
INTERIM REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND TO THE COUNCIL
on the application of Annex XI to the Staff Regulations and Article 66a thereof
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1.I NTRODUCTION
Article 15(4) of Annex XI to the Staff Regulations as last amended in 2013 1 provides that at
the end of 2018, the Commission shall submit an interim report to the European Parliament and the Council on the application of Annex XI and of Article 66a of the Staff Regulations.
This interim report implements the aforementioned provision by describing the process and outcome of the implementation of the rules for updating remuneration and pensions under Annex XI to the Staff Regulations (hereinafter the "Method") as well as the solidarity levy under Article 66a for the period 2014-2018.
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2.B ASIC OBJECTIVES AND PRINCIPLES OF THE M ETHOD ADOPTED IN 2013
The provisions 2 of the current Method for updating remuneration and pensions were adopted as part of the reform of the EU Staff Regulations in 2013. They apply from 1 January 2014 until at least 31 December 2023.
The proper functioning of the Method is based on the two underlying principles that have been reconfirmed in 2013:
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-The principle of parallelism of the evolution of purchasing power of EU staff and national officials in central governments (Article 65 and Annex XI SR); and
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-The principle of equality of purchasing power among EU staff in different duty stations (Article 64 and Annex XI SR).
2.1.1. Principle of parallelism
The principle of parallel development of purchasing power means that the purchasing power of officials of the EU follows, both upwards and downwards, the evolution of the average purchasing power of civil servants in national central government.
Therefore, under Article 65(1) of the Staff Regulations the update of remuneration and pensions reflects the annual evolution between 1 July of the previous year and 1 July of the
current year 3 of:
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-The real salaries of civil servants in the central governments in a sample of 11
Member States 4 representing at least 75% of the EU Gross Domestic Product. For
each of these Member States, the yearly change in real salaries is calculated net
1 Regulation (EU, Euratom) No 1023/2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 22 October 2013. 2 These are mainly Articles 64, 65 and 65a of the Staff Regulations and Annex XI thereto.
3 The methodology is based on the comparison of a snapshot of a national remuneration system of a Member State in the month of July of the current year with the equivalent snapshot in the same Member State in the month of July of the previous year.
4 Belgium, Germany, Spain, France, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Austria, Poland, Sweden and the United Kingdom.
of inflation and is called the Specific Indicator. The Global Specific Indicator
(GSI) is the average of all specific indicators weighted by GDP.
-
-The annual inflation in Brussels and Luxembourg (in the same proportion as the distribution of the EU staff between the two cities). This element is called Joint Index.
The GSI and the Joint Index are multiplied to calculate the value of the update. The value of the update is expressed as a percentage that is applied across-the-board to the net remuneration and pensions of all EU staff with effect on 1 July 5 .
It is in that context important to point out that the Method does not allow "double counting" of inflation, but guarantees the parallel evolution of salaries of the EU staff and the national civil servants, net of inflation. To this end, the GSI is first calculated net of inflation in the sample of 11 Member States, and only as a second step it is combined with the Joint Index.
Detailed information on the evolution of the GSI and of the Joint Index is provided respectively in parts 3 and 4.
2.1.2. Specific derogations to the principle of parallelism decided in 2013: the salary freeze and the solidarity levy
The Method was agreed in 2013 as the result of negotiations involving EU institutions, their administrations and representatives of their staff.
In accordance with Article 336 TFEU, the ordinary legislative procedure for amending the Staff Regulations involved the Commission with its right of initiative and the European Parliament and the Council as co-legislators, after consultation of the other institutions concerned and their administrations, in particular the Court of Justice and the Court of Auditors. Prior to the Commission’s proposal, extensive consultation of the representatives of staff of all institutions took place. During the ordinary legislative procedure, the Council as well implemented its procedure for consultation of staff representatives.
To take account of the particularly difficult economic and social context in the Union in that period and following the conclusions of the European Council adopted in February 2013, as part of the reform it was also decided:
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-That the update of remuneration and pensions of all staff of the Union institutions, other bodies and agencies through the Method would be suspended in 2013 and 2014 (see part 3.4.1 on the two-year salary freeze), and
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-That the potential advantages for officials and other servants of the European Union of the application of the Method would be balanced by the reintroduction as of 1 January 2014 of the system of a solidarity levy deducted from EU staff salaries at an increased rate (see part 3.4.2 on the solidarity levy).
5 To account for substantial changes in the cost of living in Brussels and Luxembourg, an intermediate update may take place as of 1 January, in accordance with Articles 4 to 7 of Annex XI to the Staff Regulations. The sensitivity threshold referred to in these provisions was not reached in Brussels and Luxembourg since the entry into force of the 2013 Method.
2.1.3. General derogations to the principle of parallelism: moderation and exception clauses
By derogation to the general principle of parallelism of purchasing power evolution, a
moderation clause limits high increases in purchasing power as well as any high loss in purchasing power for a given year. If the calculated increase in purchasing power (GSI)
exceeds 2% or if the purchasing power decreases by more than 2%, then the change in
purchasing power for EU staff is limited to 2%. The part of the gain or loss in purchasing
power exceeding 2% is applied nine months later, from 1 April of the following year.
The exception clause limits the gain in purchasing power of EU staff when there is a downturn in the EU economy. If there is a forecast decrease in the EU GDP and there is a
gain in purchasing power measured by the specific indicator, then depending on the
magnitude of the GDP decrease, a part of the gain in purchasing power is postponed to the
following year according to the table below:
Consequences in terms of
Gross Domestic Product split of the global specific Date of payment of the
indicator second part
[-0,1 % ; -1 %] 33 % ; 67 % 1 April of year n + 1
[-1 % ; -3 %] 0 %; 100 % 1 April of year n + 1
below -3 % 0 % -
If the EU GDP decreased by more than 3%, then the gain in the purchasing power due to the Method is granted when the EU economy recovers, i.e. when the gross domestic product of
the EU reaches the pre-downturn level (recovery clause).
If the final data delivered by the Commission on the EU GDP is different from the forecast to
the extent that it affects the consequences how the crisis clause was applied, then the
necessary corrections, including retroactive adjustments, either positive or negative, are made 6 .
2.1.4. Principle of equality of purchasing power among EU staff – correction coefficients
The correction coefficient puts into practice the general principle of equal treatment, which in this particular case corresponds to the equality of purchasing power between all staff of the EU institutions, bodies and agencies regardless of their place of employment.
6 The Working Group on Articles 64 and 65 of the Staff Regulations decided that the "final data" delivered by the Commission on the EU GDP for a given year would be interpreted as the data available by 30 September of the following year. This clarification was deemed to be necessary since GDP data can often be revised many years after the reference year.
Whereas the same salary grids and basic amounts apply to all EU staff, correction coefficients apply to staff serving in posts outside Brussels and Luxembourg, who should neither suffer financially from higher living costs in their duty stations or benefit from lower living costs.
Hence the correction coefficient operates as a percentage adjustment to the salary to compensate the difference (positive or negative) in the cost of living in each duty station. The correction coefficient is applied according to the following formula:
Correction
Salary in coefficient Exchange rate Salary in duty
Brussels
(in euros) X (= Economic parity X
(=1 for euro-countries) station =
(in euros for euro/
Exchange rate) countries)
Correction coefficients are updated at least once a year with effect on 1 July 7 . The detailed
evolution of correction coefficients during the reference period is provided in part 5.
2.2. Legal framework for the yearly implementation of the Method adopted in 2013
2.2.1. Procedure for the implementation of the Method – workflow of the update
Article 65 of the Staff Regulations provides that the annual update of remuneration and pensions shall take place before the end of the year in the light of a report on statistical data prepared by Eurostat. It continues indicating that the amounts and weightings (correction coefficients) referred to in Article 64 and Article 65(1) shall be understood as amounts and weightings the value of which at a given point in time is subject to update "without intervention of another legal act". The Commission shall publish the updated amounts and weightings within two weeks after the update in the C series of the Official Journal of the European Union for information purposes.
Furthermore, Annex XI to the Staff Regulations lays down detailed rules regarding the calculation of the update and the role of Eurostat and national statistical institutes in monitoring the quality of the basic data and the applied statistical methods.
The combined reading of the above provisions, as confirmed in the recitals of Regulation No 1023/2013, indicates that the update is defined as an "automatic" or "mechanical" event, which occurs without any decision-making process among the EU institutions and is based on a strictly defined methodology for processing of the relevant statistical data as regards to the calculation of the amounts and the weightings.
In terms of procedure, the Commission has defined internally an administrative workflow, involving a number of Commission services, to ensure the proper implementation of the update once the underlying statistical data is calculated and transmitted by Eurostat. The main objectives of the workflow are to put in place the necessary controls and quality checks to ensure the necessary budgetary coordination and the timely information by the Commission to the EU institutions, bodies and agencies.
Since 2014, this workflow has been applied smoothly by the Commission services. It significantly facilitated the successful technical implementation of the Method. As a result, all due payments and recoveries that resulted from the 2014-18 updates and affected the
7 An intermediate update may take place with effect on 1 January in the event of a substantial change in the cost of living between June and December.
remuneration and pensions of the staff in the EU institutions and agencies were executed within the statutory timeframe.
2.2.2. A set of strict reporting obligations
While the yearly implementation of the update does not necessitate the adoption of any legal act, the co-legislators provided for strict reporting obligations:
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-Under Article 65(1) of the Staff Regulations, every year the Commission shall transmit a report 8 to the European Parliament and the Council on data pertaining to the budgetary impact of remuneration and pensions of Union officials,
-
-Under Article 15 of Annex XI to the Staff Regulations the present interim report to the European Parliament and the Council on the application of Annex XI and of Article 66a of the Staff Regulations shall be submitted in 2018,
-
-Also under Article 15 of Annex XI to the Staff Regulations, before 31 March 2022 the Commission shall submit a report to the European Parliament and the Council assessing whether, in particular, the evolution of purchasing power of remuneration and pensions of Union officials is in accordance with the changes in the purchasing power of salaries in national civil services in central governments. On the basis of that report, if appropriate, the Commission shall submit a proposal to amend Annex XI as well as Article 66a of the Staff Regulations on the basis of Article 336 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union.
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3.S PECIFIC INDICATORS
The Specific Indicators measure changes in the purchasing power of civil servants in central governments of Member States.
3.1. Specific indicator trends for individual Member States
Calculations and figures relating to specific indicators are based on data supplied and validated by the responsible statistical authorities in the Member States. To this end, a yearly remuneration questionnaire has been developed and updated over time. A set of countryspecific methodology manuals and assessment reports is also being made public to raise the
level of transparency 9 .
TABLE 1 summarises the available data for each Member State for the period 2014-2018 together with a simple arithmetic average value for the period. TABLE 2 shows the same data, re-expressed as a cumulative index (2012=100).
8 COM(2015) 597 final, COM(2016) 717 final, COM(2017) 699 final.
9 The general methodology manual for calculating Specific Indicators is available on Eurostat’s website. In addition, 13 country-specific assessments have already published as of late 2018 and work is ongoing with other national authorities to increase the number of published assessments (see the following link: https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/web/civil-servants-remuneration/specific-indicators/country-assessments ).
3.2. Trend of the Global Specific Indicator as defined in the 2013 Method
Under the Method adopted in 2013, the GSI is computed as of 2015 using a sample of eleven reference Member States (weighted by GDP): Belgium, Germany, Spain, France, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Austria, Poland, Sweden and the United Kingdom.
Annual and cumulative data by Member State of the applicable sample
TABLE 3 shows the time series of the specific indicators for the applicable sample of eleven Member States since 2015, together with a simple arithmetic mean value for the period. TABLE 4 shows the same data, re-expressed as a cumulative index (2014=100).
Global specific indicator for the applicable sample
The cumulative impact of the GSI since 2015 is illustrated in GRAPH 5. This corresponds to the evolution of purchasing power of civil servants in the sample of 11 Member States over the period (weighted by GDP expressed in Purchasing Power Standards). In accordance with the principle of parallelism (see part 2.1.1), the purchasing power of EU staff followed the same evolution.
GRAPH 6 shows the time series since 2015 of the global specific indicator, together with the Joint Index and the consequent annual update for EU staff.
TABLE 7 presents these time series data, re-expressed as a cumulative index over the period. The global specific indicator, computed as a simple average for the four-year period, is 100.5; the cumulative impact to July 2014 (2014=100) is 102.1. The average annual inflation in accordance with the Joint Index for Brussels and Luxembourg over this period was 101.5; the cumulative impact is 105.9. The average annual update to remuneration and pensions was 102.2; the cumulative impact is 109.2.
3.3. The Global Specific Indicator as defined under previous Methods
Using a sample of Member States to calculate the GSI has not always been the approach chosen by the legislator. Prior to 2004, the GSI was calculated by reference to the statistical data for all Member States (e.g. 15 Member States in 2003).
Furthermore, during the negotiations leading to the 2004 reform, the Council decided to refer to a sample of 8 reference Member States. This decision was motivated by a retrospective data analysis suggesting that developments in that sample would reflect closely the average evolution in all Member States. However, it is to be noted that a subsequent analysis showed that the actual evolution of purchasing power in the selected sample after 2004 was lower than the average for all Member States.
In 2013, the co-legislator maintained the principle of a sample of Member States while increasing its size from 8 to 11.
With the sample of 8 Member States applicable under the previous Method (2004-2013), the simple average of the yearly GSI for the period 2015-2018 would be 100.7 and the cumulative impact (2014=100) would be 102.5.
With all 28 Member States the simple average of the yearly GSI for the period 2015-2018 would be 101.4 and the cumulative impact (2014=100) would be 105.4.
3.4. Departure from the general principle of parallelism
3.4.1. The suspension of salary updates for two years (2013-2014)
As part of the reform of the Staff Regulations in 2013, the European Council called for the adjustment of remuneration and pensions of all staff of the Union institutions through the Method to be suspended for two years. Thus no update of remuneration and pensions took
place in 2013 and 2014 10 and therefore no General Specific Indicator could have been
calculated for the same period according to the clear text of the Staff Regulations.
While the suspension of the update discontinued the application of the principle of parallelism for the period 2013-2014, the correction coefficients continued to be updated to ensure equality of purchasing power between the different places of employment.
3.4.2. The impact of the EU solidarity levy
The solidarity levy is a deduction from the remuneration of EU staff that was re-introduced at an increased rate on 1 January 2014. The rate of the solidarity levy, which is applied to the base defined in Article 66a(3) of the Staff Regulations, is 6%. It is increased to 7% for staff in grade AD 15, step 2, and above.
In the draft 2019 budget 11 , revenues from the solidarity levy are expected to reach EUR 93
million. GRAPH 8 shows the evolution of these revenues since 2012.
3.4.3. Application of the moderation and exception clauses
Between 2015 and 2018, Eurostat duly verified the figures of the updates against the criteria for the moderation and exception clauses as set out in Articles 10 and 11 of Annex XI to the Staff Regulations.
The General Specific Indicator did not exceed an upper limit of +2% or a lower limit of -2% (see GRAPH 5). Therefore the moderation clause did not apply.
The annual EU GDP growth forecast available at the time of each yearly Eurostat report was positive. Therefore the exception clause under Article 11(1) of Annex XI to the Staff Regulations did not apply.
The final data on annual EU GDP growth was positive. Therefore no correction was made under Article 11(2) of Annex XI to the Staff Regulations.
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4.T HE J OINT I NDEX
The Joint Index measures changes in the cost of living in Belgium and Luxembourg for EU officials according to the distribution of staff serving in these two Member States, based on the Harmonised Indices of Consumer Prices (HICP) in the case of Belgium and the Consumer Prices Index (CPI) in the case of Luxembourg, in accordance with Article 1 of Annex XI to the Staff Regulations.
Due to the specific consumption weights used for aggregating the Joint Index 12 , there may be
limited differences between its evolution and the evolution pattern of the HICP for Belgium and the CPI for Luxembourg 13 for a given year.
10 Pursuant to Article 65(4) of the Staff Regulations.
11 COM(2018) 300.
12 As compared with the regular weights used for price statistics, the main difference for aggregating the Joint Index is the use of weights for rents that include owner-occupiers (instead of considering only tenants).
13 Values shown are for the overall aggregate index; actual calculations are done from detailed level.
GRAPH 9 shows the Joint Index time series (annual increase June-June by reference to previous year), together with comparable information for Belgian HICP and Luxembourg CPI.
The average Joint Index over the period from 2015 to 2018 has been 101.5. The cumulative index for the whole period to June 2018 (base June 2014 = 100) is 105.9.
By comparison, the average HICP in Belgium over the period was 101.7 and the cumulative total for the period was 107.0. The average CPI in Luxembourg over the period was 100.8 and the cumulative total for the period was 103.0.
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5.C ORRECTION COEFFICIENTS
In accordance with Article 64 of the Staff Regulations, the remuneration of officials serving in places of employment outside Brussels and Luxembourg is expressed in euro and adjusted by a correction coefficient for their location which is set above, below or equal to 100%. The objective of correction coefficients is to ensure that purchasing power in a given place of employment reflects the equivalent situation in Brussels.
Correction coefficients are mathematical factors which, when applied to a monetary amount expressed in euro, together with the official exchange rate to the euro (e.g. for a particular duty station city), identify the economic parity. The latter is a statistical value reflecting the cost-of-living difference (e.g. between the duty station city and Brussels) and it corresponds to the average ratio of prices. It thus reflects the amount in national currency in a particular location which is needed to purchase the equivalent basket of goods and services in Brussels with one euro.
The methodology for calculating correction coefficients is defined and regularly improved by Eurostat in cooperation with the national statistical institutes. For the period into consideration it is worth mentioning the following developments:
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-Implementation of a more developed methodology for comparing healthcare and education costs across Member States,
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-An increasing number of organisations willing to cooperate with Eurostat 14 and to use the data issued by Eurostat for different purposes (e.g. the United Nations recently decided to use the data on correction coefficients to adjust the salaries of their staff working in the EU based on the cost of living).
5.1. Trends of correction coefficients
TABLE 10 shows correction coefficient values for individual duty stations in the EU 15 for the period 2013-2018 16 .
14 For instance, the “family budget surveys” conducted to define consumption weights have been fully harmonised with the Coordinated Organisations (e.g. OECD, Council of Europe) and the United Nations.
15 In accordance with Articles 12 and 13 of Annex to the Staff Regulations, specific weightings (correction coefficients) may also apply to the remuneration of staff posted outside the EU. The updated value of these weightings is annexed to the yearly reports adopted by the Commission on data pertaining to the budgetary impact of the updates. A specific methodology has been developed by Eurostat in cooperation with national statistical authorities.
16 TABLE 12 presents only the correction coefficients resulting from the successive annual updates. Intermediate updates taking effect on 1 January are not presented.
From this table it is apparent that the correction coefficients for different locations have followed different trends over time. In 19 locations they have decreased over the period, whilst 12 locations have experienced increases.
It is to be noted that since the entry into force of the amended Annex XI to the Staff Regulations a new procedure for creating or withdrawing correction coefficients has been in
force, in accordance with Article 9 thereof 17 . During the period 2014-2018 no formal request
has been submitted to the Commission and the list of applicable correction coefficients has remained stable.
5.2. Issues faced by the Commission with regard to correction coefficients
5.2.1. Perception of correction coefficients as impacting negatively purchasing power and attractiveness of the EU public service
The correction coefficients are often mistakenly perceived as the driver of the decrease of purchasing power of EU staff and the Commission administration is often asked about the role of correction coefficients and the methodology used for computing them. Such questions are raised by stakeholders, including staff, staff representatives, host state representatives etc. This issue arises in particular in cases involving staff whose place of employment is subject to a correction coefficient below 100, particularly when this specific coefficient is subject to downward updates.
Correction coefficients only aim at maintaining over time the equivalence of purchasing power between staff posted in different Member States and the staff posted in Brussels. Conversely, the correction coefficients do not aim at maintaining purchasing power at a given level. Hence, as the purchasing power of staff in Brussels decreased (reduction by 10.5% between 2004 and 2018) the purchasing power of staff in all places of employment decreased in the same proportion.
At the same time, the above perception of correction coefficients remains an issue related to attractiveness of the EU civil service in some Member States. In that regard, a number of EU agencies reported to the Commission a visible negative impact on their capacity to recruit and retain highly-qualified and geographically balanced staff.
5.2.2. Lack of consideration for expenses made outside the place of employment
The existing methodology as developed by Eurostat in cooperation with national statistical institutes is based on the assumption that staff member's expenditure is entirely incurred in the place of employment. This simplification has been subject to some questions as it may be seen as not fully reflecting the overall consumption patterns of staff members, which also comprises expenditure outside the place of employment. Eurostat and national statistical institutes have initiated discussions on the possibility to update the statistical methodology of correction coefficient calculation in order to take into account expenditure incurred outside the place of employment.
17 This procedure involves notably the adoption by the Commission of a delegated act following a formal request submitted by the appropriate authorities of the Member States concerned, the administration of an institution of the Union or the representatives of officials of the Union in a given place of employment.
5.2.3. Cost of living in Luxembourg
On the occasion of the last Staff Regulations reform, the co-legislators maintained the longlasting legislative solution that no correction coefficient shall be applicable to the remuneration of staff in Brussels and Luxembourg, having regard to the special referential role of those places of employment as principal and original seats of most of the institutions. At the same time, the co-legislators decided to take due account of inflation in Luxembourg by creating the Joint Index (see part 4).
This legislative solution has been subject to criticism by some staff members whose place of employment is Luxembourg, who have argued that it does not properly reflect alleged differences in the cost of living between Brussels and Luxembourg. Recently, staff members referred to the introduction of a specific correction coefficient for Luxembourg by the European Free Trade Association, which has its own staff rules.
The absence of a correction coefficient in Luxembourg under the EU Staff Regulations was also subject to several challenges before the EU Courts. Based on the latest judgment
rendered by the EU General Court in October 2018, this legislative solution is confirmed 18 as
long as the Staff Regulations as amended in 2013 remain into force.
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6.C ONCLUSIONS
Since its introduction in 2014 Annex XI to the Staff Regulations and Article 66a thereof have been successfully implemented by the Commission. The Method for update of remuneration and pensions set therein by the European Parliament and the Council have proved its efficiency and effectiveness over the five annual cycles of its implementation (2014-2018). The Method has achieved its objectives while putting aside the inter-institutional tensions and court cases known from the past.
In particular, the following conclusions may be drawn based on the implementation of the Annex XI to the Staff Regulations and Article 66a for the period 2014-2018:
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(1)In 2013 and 2014, salaries and pensions of EU officials were “frozen” in nominal terms. This came on top of limited salary adjustments in 2012 (0.8%) and no salary adjustment in 2011.
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(2)As of 1 January 2014, a solidarity levy was reintroduced at an increased rate. This effort of solidarity translated into an increased contribution of EU officials to the general EU budget in the aftermaths of the economic crisis. This contribution has been growing throughout the period even as the economic and social situation of the Union significantly improved.
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(3)Since 2015, national civil servants of 11 reference Member States have seen the purchasing power of their salaries increase by 2.1%. As a result of the application of the principle of parallelism inherent to the Method, since 2015 the purchasing power of EU officials increased in parallel with that of national civil servants in those 11 reference Member States. The use of data for all EU28 Member States though would have produced different figures (+ 5.4%).
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(4)Following an initial phase of a higher-than-average increase of the figure of the update in 2015 and 2016 that could be described as a “catch-up” effect in the Member States after the economic and social crisis, the following yearly
18 In the Judgment of the General Court (Eighth Chamber) of 4 October 2018 in case T-546/16 Marina Tataram v European Commission, the application was dismissed as inadmissible.
exercises in 2017 and 2018 have resulted into moderate nominal salary
increases.
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(5)In net terms in 2018, the Method resulted into a decrease of the purchasing power of EU staff by 0.4%.
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(6)As the Method contains an automatic annual update and automatic crisis clauses, it effectively remedied the difficulties in the implementation of the previous methods. At the same time, the Method remained constantly scrutinised by the European Parliament and the Council via the annual reports delivered by the Commission.
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(7)The Method also successfully stood legal scrutiny before the European Courts in the few individual cases brought against it. It also avoided social tensions as no major strikes took place in the Institutions during that period.
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(8)When it comes to the full implementation of the principle of equality of purchasing power among EU staff in different places of employment via the system of correction coefficients, few issues have been identified to be closely followed during the next implementation period.
ANNEX
TABLE 1: Annual specific indicator - All Member States
[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] [16] [17] [18] [19] [20] [21] [22] [23] [24] [25] [26] [27] [28]
BE BG CZ DK DE EE IE EL ES FR HR IT CY LV LT LU HU MT NL AT PL PT RO SI SK FI SE UK
2013 102,3 100,6 104,4 99,3 100,9 124,3 98,8 94,6 95,1 100,0 100,0 100,0 94,1 100,3 101,2 100,3 99,3 102,6 100,5 99,8 102,8 98,7 114,4 102,4 105,0 101,1 101,9 100,3
2014 100,2 98,5 101,7 105,0 100,9 105,1 100,5 100,0 107,9 101,6 100,0 101,4 94,3 110,5 105,2 102,0 101,5 102,1 102,8 101,8 99,9 112,7 106,8 98,0 106,3 99,5 102,6 102,0
2015 100,5 101,2 102,1 100,1 103,0 105,7 101,3 100,0 101,2 100,6 100,0 100,6 100,0 109,6 102,2 101,7 101,3 102,2 101,2 101,7 101,1 97,5 103,8 99,9 100,9 100,1 102,3 100,5 2016 103,0 103,9 134,8 100,8 101,0 113,3 103,7 100,0 104,9 100,4 102,3 100,0 100,0 105,7 103,1 98,8 101,8 102,8 106,0 104,9 107,3 102,6 111,9 102,0 107,7 100,6 104,1 101,1
2017 102,0 103,6 109,5 101,4 103,7 101,8 103,1 100,0 100,9 102,3 103,5 100,7 101,2 97,9 102,8 103,8 111,3 102,1 98,5 101,1 103,0 102,0 111,8 101,4 110,3 100,0 100,4 101,4 2018 101,8 120,8 113,4 103,1 102,8 104,4 103,4 99,9 99,0 99,8 111,1 103,8 101,7 106,5 102,8 101,0 103,7 104,2 103,0 101,9 100,6 101,2 114,3 100,9 116,8 101,1 102,7 101,1
simple average 101,6 104,8 111,0 101,6 102,1 109,1 101,8 99,1 101,5 100,8 102,8 101,1 98,6 105,1 102,9 101,3 103,2 102,7 102,0 101,9 102,5 102,5 110,5 100,8 107,8 100,4 102,3 101,1
TABLE 2: Annual specific indicator - All Member States (cumulative data: 2012=100)
[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] [16] [17] [18] [19] [20] [21] [22] [23] [24] [25] [26] [27] [28]
BE BG CZ DK DE EE IE EL ES FR HR IT CY LV LT LU HU MT NL AT PL PT RO SI SK FI SE UK
2013 102,3 100,6 104,4 99,3 100,9 124,3 98,8 94,6 95,1 100,0 100,0 100,0 94,1 100,3 101,2 100,3 99,3 102,6 100,5 99,8 102,8 98,7 114,4 102,4 105,0 101,1 101,9 100,3 2014 102,5 99,1 106,2 104,3 101,8 130,6 99,3 94,6 102,6 101,6 100,0 101,4 88,7 110,8 106,5 102,3 100,8 104,8 103,3 101,6 102,7 111,2 122,2 100,4 111,6 100,6 104,5 102,3
2015 103,0 100,3 108,4 104,4 104,9 138,0 100,6 94,6 103,8 102,2 100,0 102,0 88,7 121,4 108,8 104,0 102,1 107,1 104,5 103,3 103,8 108,4 126,8 100,3 112,6 100,7 106,9 102,8
2016 106,1 104,2 146,1 105,2 105,9 156,4 104,3 94,6 108,9 102,6 102,3 102,0 88,7 128,3 112,2 102,8 103,9 110,1 110,8 108,4 111,4 111,2 141,9 102,3 121,3 101,3 111,3 103,9
2017 108,2 108,0 160,0 106,7 109,8 159,2 107,5 94,6 109,9 105,0 105,9 102,7 89,8 125,6 115,3 106,7 115,6 112,4 109,1 109,6 114,7 113,4 158,6 103,7 133,8 101,3 111,7 105,4 2018 110,1 130,5 181,4 110,0 112,9 166,2 111,2 94,5 108,8 104,8 117,7 106,6 91,3 133,8 118,5 107,8 119,9 117,1 112,4 111,7 115,4 114,8 181,3 104,6 156,3 102,4 114,7 106,6
TABLE 3: Annual specific indicator - Sample of 11 Member States
[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11]
BE DE ES FR IT LU NL AT PL SE UK
2015 100,5 103,0 101,2 100,6 100,6 101,7 101,2 101,7 101,1 102,3 100,5
2016 103,0 101,0 104,9 100,4 100,0 98,8 106,0 104,9 107,3 104,1 101,1
2017 102,0 103,7 100,9 102,3 100,7 103,8 98,5 101,1 103,0 100,4 101,4
2018 101,8 102,8 99,0 99,8 103,8 101,0 103,0 101,9 100,6 102,7 101,1
simple average 101,8 102,6 101,5 100,8 101,3 101,3 102,2 102,4 103,0 102,4 101,0
TABLE 4: Annual specific indicator - Sample of 11 Member States (cumulative data: 2014=100)
[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11]
BE DE ES FR IT LU NL AT PL SE UK
2015 100,5 103,0 101,2 100,6 100,6 101,7 101,2 101,7 101,1 102,3 100,5
2016 103,5 104,0 106,2 101,0 100,6 100,5 107,3 106,7 108,5 106,5 101,6
2017 105,6 107,8 107,2 103,3 101,3 104,3 105,7 107,9 111,8 106,9 103,0
2018 107,5 110,8 106,1 103,1 105,1 105,3 108,9 110,0 112,5 109,8 104,1
TABLE 7: Global Specific Indicator, Joint Index and annual update
Global
Specific cumulative Joint cumulative Annual cumulative
Indicator 2014=100 Index 2014=100 update 2014=100
2015 100,2 100,2 101,2 101,2 102,4 102,4
2016 101,9 102,1 101,4 102,6 103,3 105,8
2017 100,4 102,5 101,1 103,7 101,5 107,4
2018 99,6 102,1 102,1 105,9 101,7 109,2
Simple Simple Simple avg. 2015- avg. 2015- avg. 2015-
2018 2018 2018
100,5 101,5 102,2
TABLE 10: Correction coefficients in all duty stations in the EU
between 2013 and 2018
Country and place of 1.7.2013 1.7.2014 1.7.2015 1.7.2016 1.7.2017 1.7.2018
employment
BG Sofia 57,5 55,1 52,1 51,1 53,4 55,2
CZ Prague 80,0 75,0 73,4 73,2 78,3 83,0
DK Copenhagen 134,8 133,0 131,8 133,1 133,9 131,9
DE Berlin 96,8 97,2 96,6 96,1 97,5 99,3
Bonn 94,9 94,6 93,4 92,6 93,9 95,6
Karlsruhe 92,8 95,0 93,8 93,0 94,6 96,7
Munich 108,2 107,7 106,0 105,5 107,5 110,0
EE Tallinn 78,9 78,6 78,0 77,6 80,3 82,2
IE Dublin 113,0 115,9 116,6 118,3 119,8 117,7
EL Athens 91,2 86,8 79,9 79,3 79,9 81,8
ES Madrid 96,3 94,5 90,2 88,1 88,7 91,7
FR Paris 117,4 116,8 114,6 113,8 114,8 116,7
HR Zagreb 80,0 77,6 74,6 73,5 74,9 76,4
IT Rome 104,4 100,4 99,4 97,9 97,3 96,5
Varese 92,8 93,1 92,2 90,4 90,9 90,9
CY Nicosia 83,7 81,2 77,3 74,3 74,4 77,9
LV Riga 76,1 76,5 74,2 73,0 74,9 77,6
LT Vilnius 71,9 71,4 69,0 69,7 74,3 73,6
HU Budapest 76,1 71,4 69,0 70,0 74,5 71,9
MT Valletta 84,4 83,4 84,5 85,7 86,5 90,2
NL The Hague 108,9 107,8 107,8 108,0 108,3 109,9
AT Vienna 108,3 107,2 105,9 104,7 106,3 106,3
PL Warsaw 73,0 74,1 71,8 66,7 70,6 68,6
PT Lisbon 83,1 82,2 79,2 80,6 82,4 85,7
RO Bucharest 69,8 69,5 64,8 63,8 63,9 64,0
SI Ljubljana 85,4 84,7 81,2 80,7 81,5 84,6
SK Bratislava 80,2 79,0 76,4 75,7 77,3 78,5
FI Helsinki 123,7 123,0 119,7 118,6 119,9 118,5
SE Stockholm 132,9 127,5 127,9 127,4 127,9 122,0
UK London 139,2 150,7 166,9 141,8 133,5 134,7
Culham 107,6 116,7 127,7 107,3 100,5 102,6
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