Social Economy Europe

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Registration as it was on 26 May 2020
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The following entries are flagged as duplicates of this organisation: 078855521139-42 302718911053-54 387273031247-73 500117814253-02

Overview

Lobbying Costs

17,500€

Financial year: Jan 2019 - Dec 2019

Lobbyists (Full time equivalent)

1.25 Fte (4)

Lobbyists with EP accreditation

4

High-level Commission meetings

5

Lobbying Costs over the years

  • Info

    Social Economy Europe   (SEE)

    EU Transparency Register

    739159434916-75 First registered on 22 May 2019

    Goals / Remit

    Social Economy Europe (SEE) is the voice of the 2.8 million social economy enterprises and organisations in the European Union.

    Created in November 2000 under the name of CEP-CMAF -the European Standing Conference of Cooperatives, Mutuals, Associations and foundations- with the purpose of establishing a permanent dialogue between the social economy and the European Institutions, in 2008, CEP-CMAF changed its name and officially became Social Economy Europe.

    SEE members include the European organisations of: mutual and cooperative insurers (AMICE); non-profit healthcare players, health mutuals and health insurance funds (AIM); industrial and service cooperatives (CECOP); foundations (EFC); associations of general interest (CEDAG); work integration social enterprises (ENSIE); paritarian institutions of social protection (AEIP); ethical banks and financiers (FEBEA); microfinancing institutions (EMN), social protection institutes (IPSE), non-profit social services providers (Eurodiaconia) and the European Cities and Regions for the social economy (REVES). SEE also represents the national social economy organisations of France (ESS-France), Italy (National Third Sector Forum), Portugal (CASES), Spain (CEPES) and Belgium (ConcertES).

    SEE believes in a European Union that is determined to promote the economic and social progress of its Member States, and that acknowledges its key role as global social economy leader. SEE believes in:

    -A diverse economy at the service of people. A democratic, sustainable and inclusive economy, strongly committed to society;
    -A more favourable ecosystem for the development of the European social economy, that will keep offering innovative solutions in response to societal demands.
    -The social economy’s active participation in the development and implementation of the main socio-economic policies of the European Union.

    SEE's mission is to:

    -Represent the interests of the Social Economy in the European Union so that the main EU policies promote and take into consideration this enterprise model;

    -Promote the dialogue and the inter-cooperation between our members and develop new services of common interest;

    -Boost the visibility of the economic and social impact of the Social Economy and of the values and principles that define this virtuous enterprise model;

    -Support the Member States and the national organizations aiming to promote the Social Economy development.

    Main EU files targeted

    -European Parliament's Social Economy Intergroup
    -European Commission actions and strategy for the social economy
    -European Pillar of Social Rights
    -Single Market Strategy
    -Sustainable Development Goals
    -Start-Up and Scale-Up Initiative
    -Public Procurement Strategy
    -European Social Economy Regions
    -ESF+
    -InvestEu
    -Cohesion Policy
    -Circular Economy Strategy
    -Action Plan for the Social Economy
    -European Green dEal
    -SME and Industrial Strategies
    -Disability Strategy
    -Roma Strategy

    Address

    Head Office
    Boulevard Charlemagne 74
    Brussels 1000
    BELGIUM
  • People

    Total lobbyists declared

    4

    Employment timeLobbyists
    50%1
    25%3

    Lobbyists (Full time equivalent)

    1.25

    Lobbyists with EP accreditation

    All Lobbyists with EP accreditation over time

    4 accreditations were / are live (in bold) for the selected state of 26 May 2020

    Name Start date End Date
    Paula DE DIEGO OLMOS 09 Jan 2024 08 Jan 2025
    Ms Paula DE DIEGO OLMOS 09 Jan 2024 15 Apr 2024
    Sarah DE HEUSCH 28 Jun 2023 27 Jun 2024
    Paula DE DIEGO OLMOS 06 Dec 2022 06 Dec 2023
    Mr Victor MESEGUER SANCHEZ 06 Dec 2022 28 Jun 2023
    Mr Juan Antonio PEDREÑO FRUTOS 06 Dec 2022 06 Dec 2023
    Mr Daniel MARTÍN MONTERO 09 Oct 2019 08 Aug 2020
    Ms Jessica FIORELLI 05 Oct 2019 03 Oct 2020
    Mr Juan Antonio PEDREÑO FRUTOS 12 Jun 2019 12 Jun 2020
    Mr Victor MESEGUER SANCHEZ 12 Jun 2019 12 Jun 2020
    Mr Ayodeji Williams OWOEYE 12 Jun 2019 01 Aug 2019

    Complementary Information

    SEE Director Victor Meseguer works at 50% and SEE Policy and Projects Officer Jessica Fiorelli at 25% on activities related to the Transparency Register.

    SEE President Juan Antonio Pedreño residing in Spain and who does not perceive a salary from SEE (as the Presidency is a political activity), and SEE intern Daniel Martin (who receives an Erasmus+ grant and therefore does not receive a salary) work at 25% on activities related to the Transparency Register.

    Person in charge of EU relations

    Data not provided by Register Secretariat due to GDPR

    Person with legal responsibility

    Data not provided by Register Secretariat due to GDPR

  • Categories

    Category

    II - In-house lobbyists and trade/business/professional associations

    Subcategory

    Trade and business associations

  • Networking

    Affiliation

    Social Economy Europe is part of the Stand Up for the Social Pillar Alliance, alongside with ETUC, CECOP, Social Paltaform and the European Movement International.

    Member organisations

    https://www.socialeconomy.eu.org/about/#members

  • Financial Data

    Closed financial year

    Jan 2019 - Dec 2019

    Lobbying costs for closed financial year

    17,500€

    Other financial info

    The rest of Social Economy Europe total revenue in 2019 came from membership fees (members contributions).

  • EU Structures

    Groups (European Commission)

    Commission expert group on social economy and social enterprises #E03576 #http://ec.europa.eu/transparency/regexpert/index.cfm?do=groupDetail.groupDetail&groupID=3576 #Member #C#Working group on the role of clusters and similar forms of business cooperation in fostering the development of social economy & social entrepreneurship

    Groups (European Parliament)

    Social Economy Europe is responsible for the secretariat of the European Parliament's Social Economy Intergroup.

    Created in 1990 and continuously active since then, the Social Economy Intergroup serves to ensure a permanent dialogue between all European Institutions, Member States and the social economy sector and is of vital importance to mainstream social economy’s perspective into the legislative and non-legislative work of the EU Parliament.

    In December 2014, the Conference of Presidents of the European Parliament approved the re-establishment of the Social Economy Intergroup thanks to the determined support of 80 MEPs from 6 political groups.

    During the 2014-2019 mandate the Intergroup organised 15 public hearings, attended by more than 1,400 people in total, on relevant issues and policies for the social economy.

    The Intergroup also held 6 high level meetings with key EU leaders like Vicepresident Jyrki Katainen and Commissioners Thyssen and Bieńkowska; the Minister for Labour and Social Economy of Luxemburg, Nicolas Schmit, and with the special advisor of the European Commission for European Pillar of Social Rights, Allan Larsson.

    In 2017, thanks to the support of 39 MEPs from different groups, a debate on the proposal for a European Action Plan for the Social Economy was held at the plenary of the European Parliament. Nine MEPs participated in it and Věra Jourová, Commissioner for Justice, Consumers and Gender Equality represented the European Commission.

    The Intergroup has also actively worked to mainstreaming social economy’s perspective into the legislative and non-legislative work of the European Parliament and reports of key importance such as:

    • European Parliament legislative resolution on the proposal for a regulation on the European Social Fund Plus (ESF+), including an operative legal definition of the European Social Economy, 2019.

    • Report of the European Parliament on the European Pillar of Social Rights, 2017.

    • Report on the Single Market Strategy, 2016.

    • Report on social entrepreneurship and social innovation in the fight against unemployment, 2015.

    In addition, the Intergroup strongly supported the adoption of the Council Conclusions on Social Economy, the actions of the European Commission for these enterprises and organisations, as well as the agenda of various governments and presidencies of the Council of the European Union to promote the Social Economy in Europe.

    In December 2019, the Conference of Presidents of the European Parliament approved the re-establishment of the Social Economy Intergroup thanks to the determined support of 77 MEPs from 5 political groups.

    Communication activities

    -SEE's policy paper "The future of EU policies for the social economy: towards a European Action Plan" (2018).
    -SEE Memorandum for sthe European elections 2019 "Social Economy, a driver of economic and social progress in Europe" (2019).
    -Social Economy, a driver of economic and social progress in the European Union: Annual Report 2018, Assesment of the EU mandate 2014-2019 and proposals for the future (2019).
    -Buying for Social Impact (BSI), a project commissioned by the Executive Agency for Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (EASME) and the European Commission Directorate-General for Internal Market, Industry, Entrepreneurship and SMEs (DG GROW) to promote the use of social considerations in public procurement procedures.

    Other activities

    None declared

  • Meetings

    Meetings

    5 meetings found. Download meetings

    The list below only covers meetings held since November 2014 with commissioners, their cabinet members or directors-general at the European Commission; other lobby meetings with lower-level staff may have taken place, but the European Commission doesn't proactively publish information about these meetings. For more information about which commissioner is responsible for which portfolio, check out this link: https://commissioners.ec.europa.eu/index_en All information below comes from European Commission web pages.

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