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A study commissioned by the European Consumer Organisation (BEUC) shows a weak degree of coherence between trade policy and the European Green Deal...

The European Commission today published a proposal to improve customs controls. This could help tackle the many challenges authorities face in...

According to new statistics, 2,117 notifications were made to Safety Gate – the EU’s rapid alert system for dangerous non-food products – in 2022.

BEUC and the Transatlantic Consumer Dialogue (TACD) – a network of 77 consumer and digital rights organisations – are concerned about the EU-US ‘joint...

BEUC NEWS - 20.12.2022 On 1 January 2023, Sweden will take over the rotating presidency of the EU Council, succeeding to the Czech Republic. With our...

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As of tomorrow, negotiators will meet in Geneva for the 18th round of negotiations for a Trade in Services Agreement (TiSA). This little-known trade deal is about everything from phone-calls to making payments, ordering goods online, international flights and more. It is therefore vital that civil society can give constructive feedback on the negotiations. This is currently next to impossible, due to a lack of publicly available texts.
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Today, the European Commission published the results of a study it commissioned on the EU-US trade negotiations which showed that TTIP would lead to average price increases of 0.3%, whereas household income would increase between 0.2 and 0.4%. The study is an interim version of its ‘Sustainable Impact Assessment’ which analyses the economic, social and environmental impacts of ongoing TTIP negotiations.
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Members of the European Parliament’s international trade committee adopted recommendations for the European Commission on the ongoing ‘Trade in Services’ (TiSA) negotiations. TiSA is an agreement currently being negotiated by the EU and 22 countries. Its objective is to liberalise and facilitate trade in services like e-commerce, telecommunications, financial services and transport.

Our International Affairs team works to protect Europeans in a global market. 

EU consumer policy is decided through a clear legislative process. The bloc’s external relations with third countries can affect this process and the daily lives of consumers. We therefore follow these relations and urge international engagement to include civil society and be transparent. 

Practically this means we scrutinise EU trade negotiations, ranging from ‘bilateral’ ones (with Australia, for instance) to talks about global e-commerce happening at the World Trade Organization. We remind decision-makers that trade should benefit Europeans, without negatively impacting consumer-related regulations in the EU (whether data privacy, chemical laws, food safety, etc.). 

We also look at external policy beyond ‘trade’, such as dialogues between EU and third-country regulators. The EU-US cooperation agenda is an example of this. BEUC supports such exchanges if they are voluntary and used to improve EU decision-making, address common issues, or take joint actions. 

Finally, we flag consumer concerns to decision-makers: think about issues with sending or receiving parcels from the UK since its EU exit, or dangerous products that are marketed to Europeans from outside the EU. This means we keep an eye on other policy areas, such as customs.

To make an international impact, we work with US civil society through the Trans-Atlantic Consumer Dialogue (TACD), and the global Consumers International network of more than 200 organisations.