By Susanna Rust2021-04-30T14:18:00+01:00
The European Commission or EIOPA should create a database highlighting the tax treatment applied to the Pan-European Personal Pension Product (PEPP) in each EU country, according to Bernard Delbecque, senior director for economics and research at Efama.
The database could also capture all the requirements that would need to be fulfilled to get access to tax incentives, he said.
IPE spoke to Delbecque about comments he shared with the publication following a recent PEPP-focussed panel discussion organised by Luxembourg for Finance, a public-private partnership between the Luxembourg government and financial industry federation. Delbecque was one of the panellists, alongside a speaker each from BlackRock and Amundi.
a multilateral MoU with EU and EEA NCAs covering supervisory cooperation, enforcement and information exchange between UK and EU/EEA national supervisors in the field of insurance regulation and supervision;
an MoU with the European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority (EIOPA) covering information exchange and mutual assistance between the UK authorities and EIOPA in the field of insurance regulation and supervision;
an MoU with the European Banking Authority (EBA) covering information exchange and mutual assistance between the UK authorities and the EBA in the field of banking; and
individual MoUs with EU and EEA NCAs covering supervisory cooperation and information-sharing arrangements in the field of banking. These can be found on the PRA website.