Services of General Economic Interest in EU Competition Law : Striking a Balance Between Non-economic Values and Market Competition / Lei Zhu.
Material type:
TextSeries: Publication details: The Hague : T.M.C. Asser Press : Imprint: T.M.C. Asser Press, 2020.Edition: First editionDescription: xvii, 312 pages: illustrations; 24cmISBN: - 9789462653863
- 23 341
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| 340.11 KLE 2012 REF Advancing the rule of law abroad : next generation reform / | 340.11 PRO 2006 REF Promoting the rule of law abroad : in search of knowledge / | 340.9595 NAS 2016 REF Competition Law in Malaysia / | 341 LEI 2020 REF Services of General Economic Interest in EU Competition Law : Striking a Balance Between Non-economic Values and Market Competition | 341.754 KOU 2006 REF Principles of Law Relating to International Trade / | 341.7573094 LIB 2002 REF The liberalization of postal services in the European Union / | 342.59506 JAI 2020 REF MP Jain : administrative law of Malaysia / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
This book provides a comprehensive examination of the interaction between Services of General Economic Interest (SGEI) and EU competition law, covering in particular Article 106 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU) and state aid rules. It also takes the telecommunications, postal service and transport sectors as case studies, taking into account the technological, economic and political backgrounds to these sectors. The area of SGEI has undergone fundamental developments over the past three decades and the most recent changes in the Lisbon Treaty, recognizing SGEI as a shared value and granting explicit competence to the EU, mark its constitutional significance. The key issue is how to balance economic values underlying competitive markets and non-economic public service values such as universal access to essential services. The essence of the question is the relationship between the market and the state. This controversial issue is addressed through a critical analysis of a number of landmark EU Court judgments and Commission decisions over the decades. Offering a clear appreciation of the evolution of the EU regulatory framework on SGEI that lays out the limits and boundaries within which the Member States define, organize and fund SGEI, the book is particularly aimed at academics with a research interest in the interaction between public services and EU competition law, but as it also demonstrates clearly how the application of EU competition law has transformed the public utilities sectors, it will be of interest to law makers, legal professionals and policy makers as well. Dr. Lei Zhu is a Research Associate at the Institute of International Law at Wuhan University in Wuhan, China. He studied at the Institute for Competition & Procurement Studies of the Bangor University Law School in Wales, United Kingdom, where he obtained his PhD in law in 2015.
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