Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2004-01-14-Speech-3-293"

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"en.20040114.7.3-293"2
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". Mr President, the development of the services sector constitutes the great hope of the young generations for their integration into the new economy. There is no sector of the economy which does not require services, including the private sector, or in which the services provided are not acquiring greater and greater interest. It is therefore correct that there must be mobilisation on a broader front for the prospects which are opening up with services and I should like to congratulate my honourable friend, Mrs Kratsa, for taking the initiative and drafting this report. As a member of the Committee on Legal Affairs and the Internal Market, which did me the honour of appointing me to draft our opinion, I should like to refer to certain aspects which link the internal market with the development of the job market, especially the services market, and with policies against exclusion. As we all know, the future of the internal market and the essential benefit to consumers will depend on the degree to which cross-border trade develops. However, the cross-border provision of services is still failing to progress. Consequently, one of our first concerns is to remove the obstacles to the cross-border development of services, limit the problems which still exist in free movement and establishment and further facilitate the recognition of professional qualifications, without clinging to the shackles of the past which, unfortunately, numerous associations of the liberal professions still persist in doing. Furthermore, in order to strengthen the cross-border provision of services, both with the direct provision of services to consumers and with business-to-business services, we need to look at strengthening e-commerce and, from that perspective, to promote and develop the new standards of consumption which produce services and, of course, guarantee consumer confidence. Given, moreover, that the charter for small and medium-sized enterprises already constitutes an initiative in which we have invested a great many expectations, we need to look at the possibilities, either through funding or by guaranteeing the insurance rights and strengthening the initiative of young people who want to break into the services sector in the form of self-employment or by setting up small undertakings. I should also like to remind you that the services sector is the sector for taking up people with disabilities and keeping elderly people as active members in the market. We also all know that a significant part of all services which are provided to a society are taken up by services of general interest. The policy on services of general economic interest to date has, according to the evaluations, brought about positive results. However, we do not have a complete picture of the exact impact it has had on the question of employment, which is why, in view also of today's motion on the Green Paper on services of general interest, the Commission should proceed to make a systematic inventory of the repercussions of the liberalisation of these services on employment, in conjunction of course with the degree to which the needs of society as a whole are served. Consequently, the report is an excellent opportunity for a renewed horizontal reading of the individual policies of the European Union, in light of their contribution to the development of services."@en1
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