Chapter News

European Commission | 2025 European Semester Spring Package sets out guidance to boost EU competitiveness

The 2025 European Semester Spring Package analyses the key economic and social challenges across the EU and offers policy guidance to Member States with the aim of strengthening competitiveness, prosperity and resilience. To that effect, it includes country-specific recommendations (CSRs), and promotes reforms and investments aligned with these EU priorities. The policy guidance presented comes at a time of a particularly volatile trade and security environment. It is closely linked to the Competitiveness Compass, the Commission's five-year roadmap to boost the EU's resilience and...

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Chapter News

OECD Ministerial Council Outcomes

Ministers have concluded this week’s 2025 Council Meeting at Ministerial Level (MCM). Under the Chairmanship of Costa Rica, with Australia, Canada and Lithuania as Vice-Chairs, Ministers and high-level representatives met for discussions around the theme “Leading the Way towards Resilient, Inclusive, and Sustainable Prosperity through Rules-Based Trade, Investment and Innovation”.   Read the Statement of the Chair of the 2025 MCM. The MCM is the OECD’s highest-level forum, attended by Ministers of Finance, Economy, Foreign Affairs, Trade and other high-level representatives from OECD...

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Chapter News

European Commission | EU budget 2026: Providing crucial funding for EU priorities in times of global volatility

Today's proposal by the European Commission sets the 2026 EU budget at €193.26 billion, complemented by an estimated €105.32 billion in disbursements under NextGenerationEU. Building on the mid-term revision of the EU's Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF), next year's draft budget is designed to support strategic objectives, including support for Ukraine, competitiveness, migration management, security and defence, and strategic investments, while maintaining momentum on green and digital priorities. This budget proposal comes after a series of unpredicted developments over the 2021-2027...

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Chapter News

OECD | Global economic outlook shifts as trade policy uncertainty weakens growth

Global economic prospects are weakening, with substantial barriers to trade, tighter financial conditions, diminishing confidence and heightened policy uncertainty projected to have adverse impacts on growth, according to the OECD’s latest Economic Outlook. The Outlook projects global growth slowing from 3.3% in 2024 to 2.9% in both 2025 and 2026. The slowdown is expected to be most concentrated in the United States, Canada, Mexico and China, with smaller downward adjustments in other economies. GDP growth in the United States is projected to...

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Chapter News

IMF | A United Europe Can Shape the Global Economy

The European Union must unite to shape today’s global economy, rather than be shaped by it By Gita Bhatt, Head of Policy Communications, IMF Not many places match the European Union for quality of life. Its workers enjoy more time off than in many other regions, yet their living standards are among the highest. Its core values of solidarity are exemplified in social contracts that ensure the state will care for those who need it. Yet lately the EU has lost confidence in...

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Member News

EIB | European Commission and EIB to further support decarbonisation projects from the Innovation Fund

The agreement allows EIB Advisory to further increase its impact on supporting innovative decarbonisation projects in line with the Clean Industrial Deal. Companies can now apply for project development assistance via the EIB Innovation Fund Project Development Assistance website. The renewed agreement for the Innovation Fund Project Development Assistance (PDA) is building on the success of the first Innovation Fund PDA programme. The European Commission and the European Investment Bank (EIB) have signed an agreement renewing Project Development Assistance...

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Member News

Troutman Pepper Locke | What Does the New Administration’s First Antitrust Merger Settlement Tell Us?

By: Barbara T. Sicalides, Julian Weiss, Daniel N. Anziska, and Joseph A. Farside Jr., Troutman Pepper Locke The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has agreed to accept the new administration’s first settlement of a merger-enforcement challenge. The settlement includes the divestiture of three businesses and will allow Synopsys, Inc. to complete its $34 billion acquisition of Ansys, Inc. Although the remedy is consistent with the previously announced remedies accepted by the UK’s Competition and Markets Authority and the European Commission (EC), the...

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Member News, Trade & TTIP Related

Transatlantic Trade Monitor: Facts You Need Now | Designing for Tax Agility: Why the Boardroom Must Lead the Next Trade Evolution

By Noa Sussman, Director of Global Solutions, TECEX In today’s global economy, trade taxes and trade compliance are no longer background functions. VAT, duties, tariffs, and duty drawbacks have moved from the margins of regulatory oversight to the center of strategic decision-making. As explored in the first two articles of this series, these tools are now shaping how companies’ source, price, and scale across borders. But understanding the mechanics is only the beginning. The real challenge — and opportunity — lies in how companies...

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Chapter News

OECD | Co-ordinated efforts needed to strengthen and diversify supply chains in response to elevated risks

Recent disruptions, transport network bottlenecks and rising concerns about economic security all point to the need to strengthen and diversify supply chains. However, simply re-localising all production within national borders would harm growth and undermine, rather than strengthen, supply chain resilience, according to a new OECD report. The OECD Supply Chain Resilience Review emphasises the importance of agile and effective risk management and offers evidence-based insights to strengthen supply chain resilience in the face of multiple complex global challenges, to help firms...

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Member News, Trade & TTIP Related

Jaguar Freight | The Weekly Roar – Trump tariffs go to court, new EU tariffs delayed, air cargo volumes rebounding, the trucking industry’s Great Freight Recession, and how space-based technology is transforming the supply chain.

Last week a US Trade Court (CIT) blocked many of President Trump’s new tariffs only for them to be quickly reinstated and the legal battle only starting. The bottom line for importers right now is that IEEPA tariffs remain in effect. The CAFC’s stay pauses enforcement of the CIT’s ruling while longer-term legal review continues. More importantly, importers will continue paying the tariffs. With two courts asserting jurisdiction over the matter, final authority (whether CIT or the District Court) remains undecided and will...

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