European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority
The European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority is a European Union financial regulatory agency. It was established in 2011 under Regulation No 1094/2010.
EIOPA is one of the three European Supervisory Authorities responsible for microprudential oversight at the European Union level within the European System of Financial Supervision, together with the European Banking Authority and European Securities and Markets Authority.
Background
The initial precursor of EIOPA was the Conference of the Insurance Supervisory Services of European Community Countries, established in 1957 and thus predating both the Groupe de Contact for banking supervisors and the Chairs' informal group for securities commissions.The Committee of European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Supervisors, a Level-3 Committee of the European Union under the Lamfalussy process, was established in 2004 under the terms of European Commission's Decision 2004/6/EC of 5 November 2003, later repealed and replaced by Decision 2009/79/EC. It was composed of high level representatives from the insurance and occupational pensions supervisory authorities of the European Union's Member States. The authorities of the European Economic Area Member States also participated in CEIOPS. CEIOPS Secretariat was located in Frankfurt. It was chaired by Gabriel Bernardino, the Director General of the Portuguese insurance supervisor. The other Level-3 Committees were Committee of European Banking Supervisors and Committee of European Securities Regulators.
CEIOPS was replaced by EIOPA on, in accordance with the new European financial supervision framework. The reorganisation of macro and microprudential supervisory authorities led to the creation of three new European watchdogs have replaced the previous EU committees responsible for financial market services, having had only consultative competences.
Missions and tasks
EIOPA has legal personality and acts within the powers conferred by the EIOPA Regulation.EIOPA acts in the field of activities of insurance undertakings, reinsurance undertakings, financial conglomerates, institutions for occupational retirement provision and insurance intermediaries, in relation to issues not directly covered in the acts referred to in the EIOPA Regulation Article 1.2, including matters of corporate governance, auditing and financial reporting, provided that such actions by the Authority are necessary to ensure the effective and consistent application of those acts.
EIOPA's core responsibilities are to support the stability of the financial system, transparency of markets and financial products as well as the protection of insurance policyholders, pension scheme members and beneficiaries.
To achieve the tasks above, EIOPA was also conferred the powers to develop draft regulatory technical standards and implementing technical standards, to issue guidelines and recommendations, to take individual decisions addressed to competent authorities or financial institutions in the specific cases, develop common methodologies for assessing the effect of product characteristics and distribution processes, and so on.
Organisation
The composition of EIOPA is similar with that of ESMA, namely a board of supervisors, a management board, a chairperson, an executive director, and a board of appeal. Besides the same tasks shared with ESMA, EIOPA still needs to foster the protection of policyholders, pension scheme members and beneficiaries.Location
The head office of EIOPA is still in the place of its predecessor, Frankfurt. EIOPA is accountable to the European Parliament and the council, like its two other peers, ESMA and the EBA.Board of Supervisors
The voting members of the EIOPA Board of Supervisors are representatives from the national competent authorities of EU member states, plus since reform in 2019 the EIOPA Chair.- Austria: Financial Market Authority
- Belgium: Commission Bancaire, Financière et des Assurances, then National Bank of Belgium from
- Bulgaria: Financial Supervision Commission
- Croatia: Croatian Financial Services Supervisory Agency, from accession on
- Cyprus: Insurance Companies Control Service
- Czech Republic: Czech National Bank
- Denmark: Finanstilsynet
- Estonia: Financial Supervisory Authority
- Finland: Finnish Financial Supervisory Authority
- France: Prudential Supervision Authority, renamed Prudential Supervision and Resolution Authority on, integrated into Bank of France from 2017
- Germany: Bundesanstalt für Finanzdienstleistungsaufsicht
- Greece: Bank of Greece
- Hungary:, then Hungarian National Bank from
- Ireland: Central Bank of Ireland
- Italy: Institute for the Supervision of Insurance under the Bank of Italy
- Latvia:, then Bank of Latvia
- Lithuania: Bank of Lithuania
- Luxembourg:
- Malta: Malta Financial Services Authority
- Netherlands: De Nederlandsche Bank
- Poland: Financial Supervision Authority
- Portugal:
- Romania:, then Financial Supervisory Authority from
- Slovakia: National Bank of Slovakia
- Slovenia: Insurance Supervision Agency
- Spain: Dirección General de Seguros y Fondos de Pensiones
- Sweden: Finansinspektionen
- United Kingdom: Financial Services Authority, then Prudential Regulation Authority from until Brexit on
- Belgium: Financial Services and Markets Authority
- Cyprus: Registrar of Institutions of Occupational Retirement Provision
- Greece: Ministry of Labour and Social Security
- Iceland: Central Bank of Iceland
- Ireland: Pensions Authority
- Italy:
- Liechtenstein: Finanzmarktaufsicht
- Norway: Finanstilsynet