Regulation 1/2003 Revisited
37 Pages Posted: 29 Nov 2009
Date Written: November 24, 2009
Abstract
This paper takes a retrospective look at the institutional elements of the Modernisation of Community competition law in the light of and in Response to the European Commission Report on the Functioning of Regulation 1/2003. Although the general tone of the paper is positive regarding the initial experiences of policy enforcement after Modernisation, it claims that Modernisation is a continuous process which has both centripetal and centrifugal effects on the European competition law regime. Likewise, the paper argues that the entire institutional regime is surrounded by serious accountability and due process problems. The general message of the paper is that, as an unintentional effect of decentralisation, European competition policy has become prone to general systemic problems of multi-level governance. The greatest responsibility in giving due consideration to these problems and working out the solutions falls to the European Commission, the designer of the decentralised enforcement regime and the European Competition Network. Likewise, the epistemic community can no longer treat competition policy as “special” and they need to place competition policy within the broader debate on multi-level governance in Europe.
Keywords: Multi-level governance, competition policy, decentralisation, policy networks, Regulation 1/2003, Modernisation Regulation, European Competition Network
JEL Classification: K21, K23, K42
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
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