A Critical Account of Article 106(2) TFEU: Government Failure in Public Service Provision
A Critical Account of Article 106(2) TFEU: Government Failure in Public Service Provision offers a sceptical perspective on how EU law applies to public services. Article 106(2) provides that other Treaty rules may be disapplied in order to sustain a Service of General Economic Interest (SGEI). The rhetorical presentation of Article 106(2) is as a strict exception. As a result, Article 106(2) is often presented as a threat to Europe's public service tradition. This book challenges those shibboleths by using the concept of government failure. It is concerned with instances of government intervention that are unnecessary, generate avoidable inefficiencies, or that can be bettered so as to realise general interest goals more efficaciously. As an element of the government failure critique, a market feasibility test incorporating the concept of market failure is used to expose laxity in the review of general interests under Article 106(2). Complementing that, the process of disapplying other Treaty rules under Article 106(2) is shown to have evolved from being strict to being highly indulgent of SGEI providers, with a relatively recent but only partial correction post Altmark. Overall, the strict exception label for Article 106(2) does not hold. Moreover, it is contingent and presents no legitimate general interest related threat to the organisation and delivery of public services. A comprehensive re-orientation of Article 106(2) on issues of proof is required, as is greater reliance on market counterfactuals, and much more careful separation of objectives and means in SGEI operation and design. Through these measures, the toleration of government failure can be stemmed and Article 106(2)'s contingency reduced.
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A Critical Account of Article 106(2) TFEU: Government Failure in Public Service Provision
A Critical Account of Article 106(2) TFEU: Government Failure in Public Service Provision offers a sceptical perspective on how EU law applies to public services. Article 106(2) provides that other Treaty rules may be disapplied in order to sustain a Service of General Economic Interest (SGEI). The rhetorical presentation of Article 106(2) is as a strict exception. As a result, Article 106(2) is often presented as a threat to Europe's public service tradition. This book challenges those shibboleths by using the concept of government failure. It is concerned with instances of government intervention that are unnecessary, generate avoidable inefficiencies, or that can be bettered so as to realise general interest goals more efficaciously. As an element of the government failure critique, a market feasibility test incorporating the concept of market failure is used to expose laxity in the review of general interests under Article 106(2). Complementing that, the process of disapplying other Treaty rules under Article 106(2) is shown to have evolved from being strict to being highly indulgent of SGEI providers, with a relatively recent but only partial correction post Altmark. Overall, the strict exception label for Article 106(2) does not hold. Moreover, it is contingent and presents no legitimate general interest related threat to the organisation and delivery of public services. A comprehensive re-orientation of Article 106(2) on issues of proof is required, as is greater reliance on market counterfactuals, and much more careful separation of objectives and means in SGEI operation and design. Through these measures, the toleration of government failure can be stemmed and Article 106(2)'s contingency reduced.
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A Critical Account of Article 106(2) TFEU: Government Failure in Public Service Provision

A Critical Account of Article 106(2) TFEU: Government Failure in Public Service Provision

by Jarleth Burke
A Critical Account of Article 106(2) TFEU: Government Failure in Public Service Provision

A Critical Account of Article 106(2) TFEU: Government Failure in Public Service Provision

by Jarleth Burke

eBook

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Overview

A Critical Account of Article 106(2) TFEU: Government Failure in Public Service Provision offers a sceptical perspective on how EU law applies to public services. Article 106(2) provides that other Treaty rules may be disapplied in order to sustain a Service of General Economic Interest (SGEI). The rhetorical presentation of Article 106(2) is as a strict exception. As a result, Article 106(2) is often presented as a threat to Europe's public service tradition. This book challenges those shibboleths by using the concept of government failure. It is concerned with instances of government intervention that are unnecessary, generate avoidable inefficiencies, or that can be bettered so as to realise general interest goals more efficaciously. As an element of the government failure critique, a market feasibility test incorporating the concept of market failure is used to expose laxity in the review of general interests under Article 106(2). Complementing that, the process of disapplying other Treaty rules under Article 106(2) is shown to have evolved from being strict to being highly indulgent of SGEI providers, with a relatively recent but only partial correction post Altmark. Overall, the strict exception label for Article 106(2) does not hold. Moreover, it is contingent and presents no legitimate general interest related threat to the organisation and delivery of public services. A comprehensive re-orientation of Article 106(2) on issues of proof is required, as is greater reliance on market counterfactuals, and much more careful separation of objectives and means in SGEI operation and design. Through these measures, the toleration of government failure can be stemmed and Article 106(2)'s contingency reduced.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781509912742
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Publication date: 03/22/2018
Series: Hart Studies in Competition Law
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 256
File size: 415 KB

About the Author

Jarleth Burke is a barrister specialising in competition law and economic regulation and he is a fellow of the Tilburg Law and Economics Centre (TILEC).
Dr Jarleth M Burke is a barrister specialising in competition law and economic regulation and he is a fellow of the Tilburg Law and Economics Centre (TILEC).

Table of Contents

1. In the General Interest?
A. Introduction
B. The Nature of the Problem
C. The Mechanics of Article 106(2)
D. The Essence of Government Failure and its Cost
E. This Book
2. The Pathology of Government Failure
A. Introduction
B. Government Failure and Market Failure
C. The Constitutional Grounding for Government Failure Control Under Article 106(2)
D. Approaches to Government Failure
E. Government Failure Under Article 106(2)
F. Conclusions
3. The Contestation and Indeterminacy of Article 106(2)
A. Introduction
B. The Political, Constitutional and Administrative Battleground
C. Accounts of Article 106(2)
D. Conclusions
4. A Most Contingent Exemption
A. Introduction
B. Contestation-The Scope of Article 106(2) Ratione Materiae
C. Competition-The Free Movement Derogations
D. Subordination-The State Aid Rules
E. Conclusions
5. Government Failure in Assessing Market Feasibility
A. Introduction
B. Telecommunications
C. Environmental Protection
D. Broadcasting
E. Conclusions
6. Government Failure in Disapplication Review
A. Introduction
B. The First Phase-The Strict Exception
C. The Second Phase-Permissive Derogation
D. The Third Phase-Partial Revival
E. Conclusions
7. Contours of a Better Exemption
A. Introduction
B. Government Failure Redux
C. Proposals for a Reorientation of the Law with Respect to SGEIs
D. Concluding Observations
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