Recognition of Professional Qualifications
Modernising Directive 2005/36/EC
András Zsigmond (DG MARKT/E.4)
HEE EnglandBrussels, 18 February 2014
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Directive 2005/36/EC in a nutshell
Beneficiaries: EU/EEA nationals wishing to pursue a profession which is regulated in the host MS
Considered fully qualified professionals in the home MS
Employees or self-employed
Unless other sector-specific EU legislation applies (for example seafarers)
Effects of recognition: access to profession under the same conditions as nationals
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Permanent establishment: 3 regimes
1. Automatic recognition based on harmonised minimum training requirements (7 "sectoral professions": doctors, nurses, dentists, veterinary surgeons, pharmacists, midwives, architects)
2. Automatic recognition based on professional experience (mainly crafts, industry and commerce)
3. General system of mutual recognition (primary or subsidiary application)
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GENERAL SYSTEM OF RECOGNITIONPermanent establishment
Comparison between migrant's qualifications and qualifications required in the host MS
5 levels of qualifications used
In case of substantial differences: compensatory measures (adaptation period or aptitude test)
2 years of experience required if profession not regulated in home MS
Strict deadlines for MS (4 months)4
Temporary provision of services
Assessment of the temporary and occasional nature on a case by case basis
Principle of free and immediate access to the profession if:• Legal establishment in a MS
• 2 years experience if profession not regulated in the MS of establishment
Possibility for host MS to request a prior declaration and accompanying documents
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Temporary provision of services
Derogation:• Prior check of qualifications possible for
professions having health or safety implications, if not automatically recognised (Art. 7§4)
Exercise of the profession:• Professional and disciplinary rules of the host MS
apply
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Modernisation of Dir. 2005/36 (timing)
Evaluation of the Directive
Evaluation of the Directive
Preparation of the legislative
proposal
Preparation of the legislative
proposal Discussions in the EP and
Council
Discussions in the EP and
CouncilTriloguesTrilogues
Consolidation and adoptionConsolidation and adoption
March 2010 – May 2011
June 2011 – Dec.2011
January 2012 – Feb. 2013
March 2013 – June 2013
July 2013 – November 2013
Legislative proposal
adopted on 19/12/2011
Green Paper adopted on 22/06/2011
(public consultation)
Vergnaud report
adopted on 23/01/2013
Political agreement - trilogue on 12/06/2013
Vote in EP
09/10/2013
Vote in Council
15/11/2013
Public consultation
January 2011
Steering group EPCJan – Sept 2011
Steering group EPCJan – Sept 2011
• Directive 2013/55/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 20 November 2013 amending Directive 2005/36/EC on the recognition of professional qualifications and Regulation (EU) No 1024/2012 on administrative cooperation through the Internal Market Information System (‘the IMI Regulation')
• published on 28 December 2013 in the Official Journal L354, p. 132.
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Most important issues
• European Professional Card• Alert mechanism• Sectoral professions• Common Training Principles• Language requirements• Partial access• Mutual evaluation - transparency• Other subjects
European Professional Card (EPC)
− Articles 4a to 4e and Article 60(2)(a)− Electronic certificate transmitted via the Internal
Market Information System − What does it do in case of permanent establishment?
• Accelerates recognition procedures• Validation by host Member State remains but challenge of tacit
recognition
− What does it do in case of temporary mobility?• EPC replaces declaration for 18 months and is valid on the entire
territory of the MS concerned• Valid at the same time in all MS requested for
European Professional Card (EPC)− Need for implementing acts for specific professions
(criterias of the Directive)− Interested professions
• 18 October 2013 – Call for expression of interest in EPC• 7 preselected professions: doctors, nurses, pharmacists,
physiotherapists, real estate agents, engineers, mountain guides• Public consultation
− Implementation• EPC to be ready by the end of transposition period• Work on the implementing acts (2014), technical development
(2015)
Alert mechanism
− Alert• To all Member States• Restriction or prohibition, even if temporarily; fake diplomas• Within 3 days• Limited information• Data protection
− All sectoral professions; professions with patient safety implications; education of minors, including childcare and early childhood education
− Implementing act
Sectoral health professions
− Continuous Professional Development (GoC to exchange information)
− Doctors: 5 years and 5500 hours; partial exemptions for specialist medical training; new medical specialties; Italian acquired rights
− Nurses: two-tier system, common list of competences; Romanian nurses with review mechanism; Polish nurses
Sectoral health professions
− Dentists: 5 years and 5000 hours; new dental specialties; Spanish doctors
− Midwives: 12 years of general education; update of knowledge and skills; list of activities; implementation
− Pharmacists: derogation; list of activities
Partial access
− Principle developed by the Court− Principle to be decided in individual Member States on a
case-by-case basis• The professional is fully qualified• If compensation measure = full programme of education and training• Activity can objectively be separated (home MS situation to be taken
into account)
− Possibility to reject partial access in case of overriding reasons of general interest
− Does not apply to sectoral professions− Use of the professional title / information to service
recipients
Common Training Principles
− Common training frameworks / common training tests− Conditions for the introduction− Initiative of the professional organisations / competent
authorities from 1/3 of Member States; discussion in the GoC
− Procedure: delegated act / possibility of exemptions / implementing act
− Applies to specialties
Language knowledge
− Professionals shall have the necessary knowledge of languages
− Control in case of serious and concrete doubt− Systematic control possible for professions with patient
safety implications− Safeguards for the professional
• Only one official or administrative language of the MS but MS can encourage learning a 2nd language; role of the employers
• Check only after a recognition of a qualification but before accessing the profession
• Proportionality and possibility of appeal
Mutual evaluation exercise - Context
- March 2012 European Council conclusions- EP resolution of 14 June 2012 - European Semester: several country specific
recommendations on professional services in 2012 and 2013- Article 59 of revised Professional Qualifications Directive: MS
agreed to transparency and mutual evaluation- 2nd October Communication on evaluating national
regulations on access to professions
Mutual evaluation - Facts
- Professional Services = 9% of EU GDP- Eurostat July 2013: 26.65m unemployed across EU- Around 740 categories of regulated professions from florists
to detectives, librarians to welders…:• Constitutes a barrier to free movement?• Proportionate and necessary?
- Different forms of access control have different impacts on the business environment:
• Access restrictions – Regulatory forms: Qualifications and reserved activities, certification, protection of titles.
• Other restrictions on the exercise of the professions: Legal form, shareholding, tariff setting, membership of professional bodies
Objectives of mutual evaluation
- Modernise, simplify and improve access to professions across MSs to:
• Promote mobility and encourage cross border service development• Improve competitiveness and employment in professional services• Maintain the best interests of consumers
- To achieve this we need to ask ourselves:• Are current systems fit for purpose?• Are they achieving their policy outcomes? • Are there unintended consequences?• Are there alternative ways to achieve the outcomes we desire?
The ProcessAs a first step transparency will map the whole landscape:
Give complete transparency on regulated professions and entry restrictions to interested professionals
European map of regulated professions
Case-by-case examination of the professional access restrictions in Member States: Ensure that entry barriers are justified and proportionate to protecting the public interest
(health and consumer safety). Consider the impact on mobility / quality / wages / costs to consumers/ innovation /
employment & economic growth.
Mutual evaluation will target best practice to ensure that professional access frameworks are meeting objectives that are in the best interests of European citizens.
Member States to present national action plans in April 2015 and June 2016
Timing
Other subjects
− Free provision of services− Transparency exercise− General system (educational levels; professional
experience; scope; compensation measures)− Recognition of traineeships− Access to information / e-governance− Craft / trade / industry− Implementing / delegated acts
Useful links
Professional Qualifications Directive in practice:http://ec.europa.eu/internal_market/qualifications/directive_in_practice/index_en.htm
Latest policy developments:http://ec.europa.eu/internal_market/qualifications/policy_developments/index_en.htm
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