1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910819701603321

Autore

Heremans Tinne

Titolo

Professional services in the EU internal market : quality regulation and self-regulation / / Tinne Heremans

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Oxford ; ; Portland, Oregon : , : Hart Publishing, , 2012

ISBN

1-84731-880-0

1-4725-6582-7

1-280-67705-8

9786613653987

1-84731-879-7

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (389 p.)

Collana

Modern studies in European law ; v. 28

Disciplina

343.0721

Soggetti

Antitrust law - European Union countries

Competition - European Union countries

Freedom of movement - European Union countries

Professions - Law and legislation - European Union countries

Professions - Self-regulation - European Union countries

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references: pages [353]-366.

Nota di contenuto

Concepts -- Economic analysis of professional regulation -- Economics of government regulation vs self-regulation -- The theory of economic federalism -- Free movement -- Secondary Community legislation -- Competition law -- Conclusions : connecting the dots and beyond?

Sommario/riassunto

Professional services are a key component of the EU internal market economy yet also significantly challenge the legal framework governing this internal market. Indeed, specific professional regulatory structures, which are often the result of a blend of government and self-regulation, hold clear potential for conflict with EU free movement and competition law rules. Hence this book looks at the manner in which both free movement and competition laws might apply to such self- and co-regulatory set-ups, and at the leeway given to quality considerations (apparently) conflicting with free movement or competition objectives. In addition, since court action will seldom



suffice to genuinely integrate a market, the book also explores those instruments of EU secondary legislation that are likely to impact the most on the provision of professional services. However, the book goes beyond a mere inventory to ask how EU Internal Market policy could contribute to the optimal legal environment for professional services. A law and economics analysis is employed to investigate the need for specific professional rules, the preferred type of regulator (self-, co- or government regulation), and the level - national and/or European - at which regulation should be adopted. As becomes clear, the story of the market for professional services is one of market and government failure; the author is thus left to compare imperfect situations where market failures compete with rent-seeking efforts, the tendency towards over-centralisation and national protectionism. This book offers both an in-depth legal analysis of the EU framework as it applies to professional services as well as a more normative evaluation of this framework based on insights from law and economics scholarship. It will therefore be a valuable resource for all practitioners, policy-makers and academics dealing with professional services, as well as, more generally, with questions of quality and self-regulation