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Results of the Expert Group on e-Invoicing Bo Harald Chair EC Expert Group on e-Invoicing

Moscow 3.6.2010

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Page 1: Moscow 3.6.2010

Results of the Expert Group on e-Invoicing

Bo HaraldChairEC Expert Group on e-Invoicing

Page 2: Moscow 3.6.2010

Expert Group on e-Invoicing - Mission

Defined in Commission Decision of 31 October 2007:

Identify shortcomings in current regulatory framework Define e-Invoicing business requirements Address relevant e-invoicing data elements (and linkages) Propose responsibilities for standardisation bodies and time

schedule Propose a European e-Invoicing Framework - a common

conceptual structure

Page 3: Moscow 3.6.2010

Results

1. Awareness of fundamental

importance of e-invoicing for:- Competitiveness of EU enterprises- Cost savings in public sectors- Service innovations- Learning

2. Recommendations

3. Next layer visibility - e-Invoicing is not dematerialization

only – but an enabling platform for

automating administrative processes at

large – a new paradigm

Page 4: Moscow 3.6.2010

1. Value of information in structured form apparent

2. Productivity improvement potential – 250bn > business case for service providers and customers (Deutsche Bank Research report – 54bn€ pa in Germany alone)

3. Demographic challenges – liberating for more productive work much needed

Reasons for fast adoption

Page 5: Moscow 3.6.2010

2020 35millionsmaller

25 m larger

Dilemma nbr 1: EU workforce nose-diving

Digitalization key to automation. Productivity improvement potential 250bn with e-invoicing

Automation liberates much needed resources for productive work

Automation leads to real time completion of processes

5

Page 6: Moscow 3.6.2010

4. SME-opportunities - “eliminating” half of administrative cost – less

economy of scale disadvantages of being small- becoming integrated e-parts of value chains- improved cash flow, cheaper financing and real

time visibility

5. Very large savings and service improvement potential in public sector

Reasons for fast adoption

Page 7: Moscow 3.6.2010

2. Key Recommendations

1: Meet the needs of SMEs as a priority focus.

2: Harmonise and clarify the legal and VAT framework based on equal treatment of paper and electronic.

3: Maximise interoperability and reach.

4: All actors to adopt a common invoice standard and data model- the UN/CEFACT CII v.2.

5: Establish an organisational process for implementation of the EEIF.

6: Widely promote and communicate the benefits.

Progress made

Banking sector could do more

VAT-directive for equal treatment

Much work needed

Great progress in ISO

EC to establish PAN-EU Multi stakeholder Forum and recommend member states to do same

Much work needed inSME and public sector

Page 8: Moscow 3.6.2010

Time for EU to address the needs of SMEs

• Small enterprises cannot afford to invest in advanced ERP systems

• Small enterprises cannot afford to communicate in x number of standards to their counterparts

• Small enterprises cannot afford to support connectivity to x number of counterparties

• Service providers should take all this in account – provide the simplest interfaces

Page 9: Moscow 3.6.2010

More than dematerialization – cutting administrative costs in all dimensions

Very important to demonstrate full potential for SMEs:

1. Automated accounting

2. Automated and real time cash flow estimates

3. Automated and real time VAT

4. Automated invoice financing

5. Automated and unified reporting to public sector

All achieved by moving to e-invoicing.

Page 10: Moscow 3.6.2010

Target: Cut enterprise administrative cost in half

Build on DG Enterprise 25% target by 2012. 50% suitable next target for EC, Member state and MSH Forum. How soon? 2014?

This would speed up migration to e-invoicing and make it voluntary (deadlines for unstructured invoicing and transparent pricing still needed)

Corresponding cost saving and fraud elimination targets could also be set for report handling and supervision in public sector

Page 11: Moscow 3.6.2010

Summary• E-invoicing is just one step – but the foundation for

wide scale automation of administrative processes• SMEs should be given more time for business – less for

administration• Cutting administrative costs in half is possible• If we start now we may be ready by the time work force

shortage sets in in earnest• The questions to ask: • Are we helping enterprises – aggressively enough?• Is the public sector acting in a model role • Should this not be the next milestone for the Single

Market?

Page 12: Moscow 3.6.2010

12 2010-03-07Page 122006-03-23

“Ice Age”“Huge Ice Age”

3 approaches:“Any hype will do”Early start: “Explorer”Late (re)start: “Panicky follower”

Page 13: Moscow 3.6.2010

The future is not plannednor prognosed

Thank [email protected],

http://boharald.blogspot.com

It is created !

2010-03-0713