Vision

The future of a united Europe relies on solving our current economic challenges. This
includes the continuing impacts of the continuing crises since 2008 on European economies, high unemployment, in particular, youth unemployment; threats and opportunities arising from digitisation,
and the precarious sustainability of Member States’ budgets. Bolt Europa ́s economic vision requires our societies to reduce inequalities between EU economies and to address future economic challenges with sound, data-driven approaches.

Bolt will address these challenges by:

We support a new way of shaping European economies based on EU-wide cooperation to build an integrated, fair and sustainable economic system.

Develop and reform our economies

Unleash entrepreneurship and small businesses

Funding support and sustainable finance

Support entrepreneurs by providing information and access to relevant sources of financing. This entails thorough analysis of the existing funding sources at different stages of business growth and enabling the private sector to fill the identified gaps (e.g., “valleys of death”) through relevant structures and incentives.

Profits-for-all mentality

Bolt wants to incentivise and value social entrepreneurship. To do so, Bolt will:

Invest in the environmental resilience of all those living in Europe

Bolt wants to close the financing gap between what is needed for all EU citizens to live in a resilient society and current expenditure and what funding is currently available. This includes:

Service mentality

Public administrations will be incentivised to offer effective and easy-to-understand support to members of the private sector to ensure that processes are simple and regulations are easy to follow. To achieve this objective, Bolt proposes to:

Revive innovation in our economies and promote industries of the future

Innovation should be at the heart of the long-term strategies of both companies and governments. However, despite statements of intent and several good public sector initiatives, many European economies still struggle to create an environment that supports innovation.

Idea generation and supportive infrastructure

Incentivise idea* and knowledge generation in European economies to stimulate growth. To achieve this, Bolt proposes the following steps:

Supportive regulation

Push government interventions to guide, foster, and protect European innovation. Bolt will do this by promoting the following measures:

New markets and new energy

Support research and development (R&D) in growing markets with strategic
relevance, e.g., green energy and Industry 4.0 initiatives. Bolt will support growth in
these markets by taking the following steps:

Foster a European Artificial Intelligence initiative

Artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming the economy, society, and social and political systems in Europe and globally. The societal impact of AI can be either very beneficial (e.g., safer roads, personalised healthcare, and efficient use of resources) or lead to unfavourable outcomes (e.g., technological unemployment, increasing inequality, or lethal autonomous weapons).

There is an urgent need for action, as technological development and practical applications are advancing at a rapid pace. The debate has to be societal, not just technical. AI not only has a direct impact on business models, labour markets, and income distribution, but also raises fundamental
ethical questions about human–machine interaction, the nature of work, citizens’ privacy, and the distribution of benefits.

The development of AI requires a European approach to achieve critical mass for global competition. Only then can we ensure that AI technology builds on human values and, together, build a social union to mitigate undesirable effects of AI, such as involuntary unemployment, which will be felt in labour markets across Europe. Bolt stands for a European AI initiative to:

Develop the ethical and legal foundation and boundaries for AI development

Develop and adopt AI ethics guidelines

Bolt welcomes all EU efforts to develop such guidelines and binding standards, e.g.,
through the European AI Alliance. Bolt believes that these guidelines should reflect
the following values:

Develop a legal and regulatory framework

A legal and regulatory framework for AI development is needed to ensure that these core values are being applied in practice, including the following building blocks.

Build Europe’s competence in artificial intelligence (AI) development

Bolt supports a concerted European effort to build artificial intelligence (AI) competence, with the following key building blocks:
i) research and innovation,
ii) education and training of human resources, and iii) infrastructure. The following proposed actions will contribute to this effort.

Prepare Society for artificial intelligence (AI) related structural changes

The advent of Artificial intelligence (AI) is a cause of anxiety for many people. These concerns need to be taken seriously and addressed. Otherwise, widespread anxiety may slow a necessary transformation and populists may use anxiety to spread divisiveness with false promises and simple solutions. This anxiety manifests itself in the labour market, in the form of a widespread fear of job losses and job quality depreciation, although predictions about the actual impact of AI vary widely. Bolt proposes a three-pronged approach: secure – prepare – create.

Shape the future of work and tackle (youth) unemployment with innovative concepts

Future of work – new working schemes

Bolt wants to introduce measures to curb unemployment and promote new models of work. We therefore need to increase the flexibility of our workforce to better meet changing demands in changing economies. At the same time, we need to develop adequate legal and social frameworks and protections for these new situations. New technological possibilities enable new ways of working. Policies have to harness this potential by providing adequate frameworks for decentralised and more flexible
working models.

Preventive measures, targeted re-skilling and reintegration

According to Eurostat data, 3.722 million young people (under 25years of age) were unemployed in 2017 in the EU28, a decrease of 380,000 as compared with October 2016. The lowest youth unemployment rates were observed in Germany (6.6%) and the Czech Republic (7.2%), while the highest were recorded in Greece (40.2% in August 2017), Spain (38.2%) and Italy (34.7%). Although these figures demonstrate
progress, youth unemployment still remains high. Despite attempts like the Youth Employment Initiative, Youth Guarantee, and the European Solidarity Corps to mitigate youth unemployment, young people starting their careers continue to face challenging structural problems. The longstanding practice of offering unpaid internships, inadequate protection services for young workers, and inconsistencies between the job market and skills acquired during education persist. A better exchange of information between educational institutions, employers and labour offices is necessary in order to increase the interface between education and available employment. Bolt wants to prepare the future workforce and the currently unemployed to be competitive in the labour market. Special consideration should be given to avoiding unemployment through preventive measures. This could include reducing the number of pupils leaving school without any degree and responding to job shortages before they occur.

Ease job seeking and create fluid job markets

Remove barriers that slow down or block the matching between job seekers and offers through the use of digital tools, platforms, data analytics, and targeted language training, to thereby foster better cooperation with the private sector.

Social policies

Develop economically disadvantaged areas and champion trade

Fight inequalities among European regions by enabling disadvantaged areas to recover and/or invest in their future. Continue to champion free, fair and sustainable trade around the world while improving the enforcement of EU-standards for all imported goods. In particular, we aim to ensure that non-EU partners fully comply with our standards. Instead of just maximising economic growth,
modern societies should work to eliminate social inequalities and guarantee a decent quality of life for all. Governments should not be evaluated on their economic performance but on whether they succeed in strengthening cohesion among their citizens.

Develop economically disadvantaged areas

Champion Trade

Fiscal policies

Taxation challenges and general principles

Bolt is aware that this will be one of the fiercest battles for European integration.
Therefore, this long-term process is intended to be implemented gradually, measure
by measure.

Bolt believes that common European taxation is necessary as an EU competence. Moreover, Bolt thinks that the forms of taxation in all Member States should be highly aligned. Discretionary European taxes would ensure direct sources of funding for the EU and allow a better response to the challenges of globalisation. Moreover, this would assure solidarity between EU members while requiring more fiscal
sustainability. Finally, it would ensure that non-European companies could not easily circumvent our national regulations. Our long-term goal is to have a European Union budget financed through taxes levied by the Union itself, not through member state contributions. We are proposing to triple the size of the European budget to around a trillion a year to replace national investment expenditure and provide cyclical stabilisation.
Bolt wants to pursue several objectives in both individual and corporate taxation:

Concrete proposals about taxation

Individual taxation

Corporate taxation

In order to stop tax evasion and generate tax revenues at the European level that feeds a European Budget, Bolt proposes to introduce an EU Corporate Tax. The tax implementation will center around three critical issues:

General taxation

European corporate tax

The first step towards a European corporate tax would primarily affect larger EU companies (see below which characteristics would apply) and non-EU companies conducting business in the EU. We must ensure that non-EU companies generating revenues in the EU are taxed appropriately on their profits in relation to their European revenues. Since it is very easy for non-EU companies to transfer their profits out of the EU and thus pay very low taxes, We must find alternative instruments to assure a fairer competition scenario in Europe. This would also provide incentives for the EU Member States to compete on non-tax features to attract businesses.

Non-EU-based companies are companies whose headquarters (HQ) company is based outside of the EU. or the parent Companies covered by these new “revenue taxation” rules can apply to be taxed on their profits. This can happen if:

If a company falls under the above EU rules but makes losses instead of profits (i.e. start-up phase, when launching a new product), it can use accounting mechanisms that permit it to carry forward the loss to future financial years.
Due to the extensive nature and length of the taxation topic, many technical mechanisms have not been taken into account, but this will happen during the legislative process.

D. European Tax Authority (ETA)

If a corporate group operates in three or more European Member States, their taxes should be collected by a European Tax Authority (ETA). This would meet expectations of both companies and reduce the burden of data collection on national tax authorities.

Furthermore, the tax base should not be determined at an entity level but at group level in order to avoid profit shifting through transfer pricing mechanisms. Bolt therefore supports the proposal for a council directive on a Common Corporate Tax Base and on the Common Consolidated Corporate Tax Base.

Bolt in general supports the action plan for fair and simple taxation, supporting the
recovery strategy as of 15 July 2020. However, our main priority is to alleviate burdens from national taxation authorities and assist in the fair recovery of taxes due by multinational companies. 67

By creating a European Tax Authority, Bolt wants to limit bureaucracy and streamline information by expanding the current EUROFISC. The current proposal by the Commission to share more company data with Member States , will certainly increase the burden on Member States to manage and process the data, while not guaranteeing fair taxation as the proposal assumes sufficient capacity to manage it. 70
Rather, the European Tax Authority should support and cooperate with national tax authorities to support Member States in combating against tax evasion while ensuring tax collection.

Elements that the European Tax Authority (ETA) would look into:

Mobilise Europe in a smart and sustainable way

In Europe, air pollution continues to take a heavy toll on health, causing around 400,000 premature deaths annually. 71 Road mobility also comes at a high price in 2015, slightly over 26,000 people lost their lives in road accidents within the EU, whereas the total number of road deaths in 2015 is still more than times higher than the total number of deaths in rail and air transport combined. Many European cities are polluted, noisy, and face massive congestion problems.

On the other hand, rural areas face the challenge of lacking transport connections. For many years now, freedom of movement has been fully recognised and applied throughout the European Union. However, apart from some security restrictions, travelling on our continent is still complex. Much remains to be done regarding pollution, and travellers’ rights are not always optimal. We follow the UN’s definition of sustainable transport as “the provision of services and infrastructure for the mobility of people and goods * advancing economic and social development for the benefit of present and future generations * in a manner that is safe, affordable, accessible, efficient, and resilient, while minimising carbon and other emissions and environmental impacts.” We envision a smarter and more eco-friendly transportation system, both for people and goods, that is built on cutting-edge technology while increasing safety and leveraging concepts such as the sharing economy. Bolt wants greener cities with reduced noise and as little pollution as possible, which will result in a higher quality of life for everyone.

Bolt recognizes the two main challenges of autonomous vehicles (AV) technology as (1) technical development and (2) creating a stringent political framework at European level.