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Critics slam landmark EU competitiveness report as ‘one-sided’

Draghi is being accused by various stakeholders of not including voices from all parts of Europe in his landmark report.

Former European Central Bank President Mario Draghi’s recently released, long-awaited report on EU competitiveness is being accused of being one-sided, as critics point to an apparent lack of diversity in its consultation process. 
According to a list published by the European Commission, Draghi’s team received 236 contributions — in writing or in meetings — from think tanks, universities, lobbyists, EU bodies, trade and business associations and some NGOs.  
The list includes prestigious Brussels-based research institutions, big tech companies such as Google and Amazon, the European Central Bank and top non-EU universities such as the London School of Economics or Harvard.  
However, some stakeholders flag that those who didn’t make it on the list of contributors to the report commissioned by Commission President Ursula von der Leyen are just as noteworthy.
“Not a single Central and Eastern European personality has been questioned by Draghi’s team about the desolate state of Europe,” said Velina Tchakarova, a Vienna-based geopolitical consultant, in a post on X.   
The Commission says it is aware of these allegations, but since Draghi was mandated as an independent special advisor, “it was up to him to choose his working methods and consultation process,” a Commission spokesperson said on Friday.   
Yet complaints keep mounting as civil society organisations and NGOs have also voiced alarm that their views are not reflected in the 400-page report released on 9 September, which makes recommendations on how to bridge Europe’s widening gap with its biggest economic rivals, China and the US.  
Civil society and trade unions account for only 5% of the contributions to the Draghi report, Olivier Hoedeman, Corporate Europe Observatory’s research and campaigns coordinator, told Euronews.   
“With such a one-sided process, it [the report] fails to adequately address the scale of the ecological crisis and social inequality in Europe,” Hoedeman added.  
Other NGOs, such as the European Environmental Bureau (EEB), were listed as contributing stakeholders – but the EEB told Euronews it was not involved in the process, despite requests to meet Draghi’s team.   
“Had the EEB been consulted, we would have stressed the importance of ensuring that President von der Leyen’s Clean Industrial Deal does not become a deregulation agenda,” said EBB Secretary General Patrick ten Brink.   
Draghi’s office did not respond to a Euronews request for comment by the time of publication. 

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