Photo of the day: Young visitors on the "Solidarność" ("Solidarity") Esplanade in front of the European Parliament. Facebook
Growth + #development aid = fighting #poverty. This is the recipe discussed during a meeting of parliamentarians from EU and the African, Caribbean and Pacific...(read more) Facebook
There has to be room for creativity, according to the culture committee. Read more @ http://epfacebook.eu/a5f and tell us: what do you do in your free time? Facebook
Stifling protest is a no-no in a country that wishes to be part of the EU like #Turkey, say members. Watch the video to find out more @...(read more) Facebook
Everyone should have access to basic banking services, according to the European Parliament ©Belga/AFP About 30 million adult EU citizens do not have a bank account, including the homeless and people with a low or irregular income. In a resolution adopted on 4 July, MEPs say that everybody should have access to basic banking services and call on the Commission to tackle this financial exclusion.
The majority of MEPs believe that legislation is needed at EU level because previous Commission recommendations have led to results in only a few countries. However, some MEPs argue that decisions about attracting prospective customers should be left up to the banks themselves.
What is being proposed
Jürgen Klute, a German member of the Confederal Group of the European United Left - Nordic Green Left, was responsible for steering the resolution through Parliament. In his report he wrote that banks and other institutions offering payment accounts should not be able to refuse granting such an account on grounds such as low income, type of employment, credit history, or level of indebtedness. Payment service providers should be required to ensure that among the products that they offer the basic payment account is always the most affordable account for basic transactions. The resolution also asks the Commission to submit by January 2013 a proposal for a directive ensuring access to basic payment services to all consumers legally residing in the Union.
The basic account would allow a person to carry out any essential payment transaction such as receiving income or benefits, paying bills or taxes, or buying goods and services.
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Newsletter - 2-5 July 2012 - Strasbourg plenary session
Opening: EU patent law postponed, concern about developments in Paraguay
Customs needs better tools to enforce intellectual property rights
"Name and shame member states dragging their feet over animal welfare" - MEP Marit Paulsen
Life-saving emergency eCall system should be mandatory, say MEPs
European Council: MEPs warn new laws need to be adopted soon in order to overcome crisis
ACTA debate: MEPs disagree about the best way forward
David Martin on ACTA: law negotiated in secret is usually bad law
European Parliament rejects ACTA
2013 budget: MEPs call on governments to negotiate responsibly
Eurozone crisis: not just roadmaps but legislation needed by September
EP wants access to basic banking services for all
MEPs call on Commission to do more to defend free movement
7% of the EU's adult population - about 30 million people - do not have a bank account
6.4 million of those have not asked for a bank account or have been deprived of it
The member states with the highest percentage of citizens without bank accounts are Romania and Bulgaria: about 50% of the adult population