European Competition vs. Global Competitiveness: Transferring EU Rules on State Aid and Public Procurement Beyond Europe

ESRC Centre for Competition Policy Working Paper No. 10-10

27 Pages Posted: 11 Aug 2010

See all articles by Michael Blauberger

Michael Blauberger

University of Salzburg, Salzburg Centre of European Union Studies (SCEUS)

Rike Kramer

TranState Research Center (SFB 597); University of Bremen

Date Written: August 1, 2010

Abstract

As long as there is no effective state aid control outside the EU, the European Commission faces a dilemma: either European firms will be disadvantaged in global competition by strict EU rules, or the Commission will come under pressure to relax the rules, thereby running the risk that fair competition within the EU will be undermined. As a consequence, the Commission attempts to promote EU rules on state aid and public procurement beyond EU borders – in non-member countries as well as at the WTO level. This article analyses the Commission’s channels of regulatory transfer and the factors accounting for its varying success. Bilateral cooperation provides many opportunities to spread European state aid rules, but decentralised enforcement at the national level remains ultimately deficient. Moreover, the transfer of European rules to the multilateral WTO depends heavily on the EU’s ability to reach prior consensus with its most powerful partner and rival, the US Government.

Keywords: State Aid, Public Procurement, Regulatory Export

Suggested Citation

Blauberger, Michael and Kramer, Rike, European Competition vs. Global Competitiveness: Transferring EU Rules on State Aid and Public Procurement Beyond Europe (August 1, 2010). ESRC Centre for Competition Policy Working Paper No. 10-10, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1656961 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1656961

Michael Blauberger (Contact Author)

University of Salzburg, Salzburg Centre of European Union Studies (SCEUS) ( email )

Mönchsberg 2
Salzburg, Salzburg 5020
Austria
+43-662-8044-7621 (Phone)

HOME PAGE: http://www.uni-salzburg.at/portal/page?_pageid=1625,1836014&_dad=portal&_schema=PORTAL

Rike Kramer

TranState Research Center (SFB 597) ( email )

P.B. 33 04 40
Bremen, 28334
Germany

University of Bremen ( email )

Universitaetsallee GW I
Bremen, D-28334
Germany

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