Policy Sections
Mini Sections
Stagiaire / Trainee – for the leading EU policy media
Junior Scientific and Technical Advisor
ASSISTANT COMMUNICATIONS & PUBLIC AFFAIRS DEPARTMENTS
Head of Section, responsible for high-performance computing and data handling
Senior Manager, European Electricity Policy
Senior Manager, European Regulation
EU Affairs - Online Media Sales Manager
Senior Media Officer / Head of Press relations Team
Policy advisor Economics and Finance
Post an EU jobTwelve directorate generals at the European Commission should be abolished, claims Alex Singleton in a paper for the Globalisation Institute.
The November paper argues that "the Commission is in desperate need of reform".
"Scrapping twelve of the existing directorate generals could be done without any noticeable removal of services to the public" as "too many […] simply duplicate what is being done by EU member states" or "do jobs that are unnecessary", believes Singleton.
He calls for the Commission to focus most "on those tasks where it can deliver real benefits to Europeans", including trade, competition, consumer protection, energy and the environment, which he insists still leaves it with "huge amounts" of work to do.
Singleton suggests closing twelve DGs, namely agriculture and rural development, economic and financial affairs, education and culture, enterprise and industry, fisheries and maritime affairs, information society and media, regional policy, research, communication, development, humanitarian aid and EuropeAid, offering analyses of how the EU would manage without each one.
Moreover, he calls for the Joint Research Centre, the translation service and the informatics service to be privatised, and the Committee of the Regions to be scrapped altogether.
Singleton says that the twelve DGs he proposes abolishing "gobble up hundreds of millions of European taxpayers' money without providing any meaningful benefit to the public". Scrapping them would free up money for the Commission's trade, environment and competition activities and give member states scope to cut taxes, he adds.
He concludes that in a competitive global economy, "we cannot afford the overhead of thousands of unnecessary bureaucrats in Brussels", describing them as "a burden on economic success and future prosperity".