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Europe in 2013

First and foremost, happy New Year. I hope 2013 is a great year for all of you.

Late 2012 marked the mid-point of the UK Coalition government’s five year term and this week the Prime Minister and Deputy Prime Minister published the Government’s own mid-term review.

Given the interest in Sweden on the UK’s approach to the EU, I thought I would summarise here some of the key points on Europe:

–    The Government is committed to membership of the European Union. The future of our economy is deeply connected to the stability and prosperity of the EU.

–    It is therefore in our interests that the immediate crisis in the Eurozone should be resolved as speedily and effectively as possible.

–    In the long run, European Union prosperity depends on free and open markets. We are committed to working for the completion of the single market.

–    At the same time, we will oppose any new burdensome and costly regulatory proposals which threaten our competitiveness, and, alongside like-minded allies, insist on discipline in European Union spending.

The review sets out some of the Government’s key priorities for the year ahead, including:

–    We will insist on a tough, fiscally responsible outcome of the negotiations on the next EU seven-year budget framework, continue to make the case for Common Agricultural Policy reform and prevent any changes to the British rebate.

–    We will continue vigorously to defend Britain’s interests in the negotiations on a banking union and protect the competitiveness of the City of London and UK financial services. The safeguards that we have achieved in the initial banking union negotiations set a crucial precedent, and will protect countries such as the UK which are not part of the single supervisory mechanism.

–    We will continue to lead the EU growth agenda – with the aim of removing unnecessary regulations particularly for small and innovative companies, deepening and widening the single market and liberalising trade, notably by negotiating a free trade deal with the US.

Those three areas – ensuring a realistic budget for the EU, ensuring that the rights of all member states are respected, in particular with regard to the Single market, as the Eurozone integrates, and a focus on growth and trade –  are all areas where the UK and Sweden will, I am sure, continue to work closely together in 2013 and beyond.

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