Economic and Financial Affairs Council

"Ecofin" redirects here. For the UN body, see Economic and Financial Committee.
European Union

This article is part of a series on the
politics and government
of the European Union

The Economic and Financial Affairs Council (ECOFIN) is one of the oldest configurations of the Council of the European Union[1] and is composed of the economics and finance ministers of the 28 European Union member states, as well as Budget Ministers when budgetary issues are discussed.

ECOFIN often works with the European Commissioner for Economic and Financial Affairs and the President of the European Central Bank.

Tasks

The Council covers a number of EU policy areas, such as economic policy coordination, economic surveillance, monitoring of Member States' budgetary policy and public finances, the euro (legal, practical and international aspects), financial markets and capital movements and economic relations with third countries.[1] It also prepares and adopts every year, together with the European Parliament, the budget of the European Union which is about €145 bn.[2]

Decision making

The council meets once a month and decides mainly by qualified majority, in consultation or codecision with the European Parliament, with the exception of fiscal matters which are decided by unanimity.[1] When the Ecofin Council examines dossiers related to the euro and EMU, the representatives of the Member States whose currency is not the euro do not take part in the vote of the Council.

ECOFIN delegates some of its tasks to the Code of Conduct Group.[3] For example, that Group has resolved issues of tax policy on Jersey, Gibraltar and other "dependent or associated territories",[3] and investigated the UK Patent Box tax treatment.[4][5][6]

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, April 26, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.