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Regulatory convergence on the road to 2012… Or, how to dig up the road just the once!

By Anthony Kirby, head of regulation and compliance at Accenture.

This story begins and ends with digging. When Monnet and Schuman conceived the idea of the European Union and the Treaty of Rome was signed in 1957, the aspiration was to ensure the freedom of movement of goods, persons, services and capital, and the Common Market started with goods – iron ore and coal dug from the ground to be precise. Thirty years later, the progress towards the creation of a single market for all four domains was accelerated by the passage of the Single European Act in 1986, which introduced qualified majority voting and the principle of mutual recognition (needed to ensure harmonisation of the laws within each Member State). Subsequent discussions on creating a single market in financial services resulted in the tabling of a framework for action called the Financial Services Action Plan (FSAP) which was published in May 1999. The motivation for doing this was economic and threefold; first, to ensure that capital could be raised more easily by European companies intending to start up or innovate; second, that supply and demand for capital could be matched more effectively; and third, to ensure that consumers EU-wide could access a far greater choice of financial products.



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