Confederation of European Business

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Confederation of European Business
AbbreviationBusinessEurope
Location
Region served
European Union
President
Fredrik Persson
Director General
Markus J. Beyrer
Websitebusinesseurope.eu

The Confederation of European Business, shortened as BusinessEurope, is a

employers' organizations. The current president of the confederation is Fredrik Persson, while the Director General is Markus J. Beyrer
.

Based in Brussels, the confederation is officially recognised as a social partner at European level, is involved in a range of economic and social decisions and cooperates with a number of stakeholders and business partners. It promotes the interests of corporate citizens to ensure that public policy supports the European economy. It is generally considered the strongest interest organisation in Brussels[1] and represents 20 million companies through its member trade associations in 36 European countries.

History

In 2014, Unilever terminated its membership in BusinessEurope's Advisory and Support Group because it opposed the organisation's stance on carbon dioxide emissions.[2][3]

Leadership

The association is led by a president, which has been held by the following persons:[4][5]

BusinessEurope is administered by a director general. Markus J. Beyrer has been holding that position since 2013.[6]

Activities

The Confederation of European Business organises the biannual BusinessEurope Day in Brussels.

Member organisations

  Members in countries outside the European Union
Country Organisation(s)
 Austria Federation of Austrian Industries
 Belgium Federation of Belgian Enterprises
 Bulgaria Bulgarian Industrial Association – Union of the Bulgarian Business
 Cyprus Cyprus Employers & Industrialists Federation
 Czech Republic Confederation of Industry of the Czech Republic
 Germany
Federation of German Industries
Confederation of German Employers' Associations
 Denmark
Confederation of Danish Industries
Confederation of Danish Employers
 Estonia Estonian Employers' Confederation
 Finland Confederation of Finnish Industries
 France Mouvement des Entreprises de France
 Greece Hellenic Federation of Enterprises
 Croatia Hrvatska Udruga Poslodavaca
 Hungary Confederation of Hungarian Employers and Industrialists
 Ireland
Irish Business and Employers Confederation
 Iceland The Federation of Icelandic Industries
Confederation of Icelandic Employers
 Italy General Confederation of Italian Industry
 Lithuania
Lietuvos pramonininku konfederacija
 Luxembourg Business Federation Luxembourg
 Latvia Employers' Confederation of Latvia
 Montenegro Montenegrin Employers Federation
 Malta The Malta Chamber of Commerce Enterprise
 Netherlands
Confederation of Netherlands Industry and Employers
 Norway Confederation of Norwegian Enterprise
 Poland Polish Confederation Lewiatan
 Portugal Confederação da Indústria Portuguesa
 Romania Concordia
 Serbia Unija poslodavaca Srbije
 Slovenia Association of Employers of Slovenia
 Slovakia National Union of Employers (Slovakia)
 San Marino Associazione Nazionale dell'Industria Sammarinese
 Spain
Spanish Confederation of Employers' Organizations
 Sweden Confederation of Swedish Enterprise
 Switzerland Économiesuisse
Schweizerischer Arbeitgeberverband
 Turkey
Turkish Industrialists' and Businessmen's Association
Turkish Confederation of Employer Associations
 Ukraine Federation of Employers of Ukraine
Union of Ukrainian Entrepreneurs
 United Kingdom Confederation of British Industry

See also

References

  1. ^ "Brussels' most powerful lobbyist? Step forward BusinessEurope". Corporate Europe Observatory.
  2. ^ "Unilever confirms it has quit BusinessEurope lobby group". 22 August 2014.
  3. ^ "WBCSD - World Business Council for Sustainable Development". Archived from the original on 2015-02-04. Retrieved 2015-02-04.
  4. ^ "History of the organisation". Business Europe. Retrieved 17 June 2016.
  5. ^ "Jürgen Thumann wird EU-Lobbyist". Handelsblatt (in German). 29 June 2009. Retrieved 17 June 2016.
  6. ^ "Ex-HP-Vorstand Rudolf Kemler wird ÖIAG-Chef". Die Presse (in German). 7 September 2012. Retrieved 17 June 2016.

Sources

External links