State Aid Control in South-East Europe: Waiting for a Wake-up Call
Abstract
The South-East European (SEE) countries, having signed Stabilisation and Association Agreements with the European Union, are required to establish an operationally independent state aid monitoring authority, to harmonise their legislative framework with that of the EU, and to demonstrate a credible enforcement record. This paper analyses whether these requirements for EU accession have been achieved so far. The authors conducted a comparative cross-country analysis and tried to identify common problems and enforcement trends. As the paper elucidates, the SEE countries have largely met the EU requirements by harmonising their national state aid acts and corresponding by-laws with EU law. However, these rules are applied in a different socio-economic context and by national authorities of dubious independence from the government, which results in a modest enforcement record. As may be derived from the pre-accession experience of the countries of Central and Eastern Europe, the effectiven...ess of state aid control mechanisms is conditioned by the credibility of the country's EU perspective. And the South-East European countries have only just started their European journey.
Keywords:
State aid / EU enlargement / Competition law / Approximation with EU lawSource:
European Business Organization Law Review, 2017, 18, 2, 333-349Publisher:
- Springer, New York
DOI: 10.1007/s40804-017-0069-z
ISSN: 1566-7529
WoS: 000406044500005
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85024857679
Collections
Institution/Community
Pravni fakultet / Faculty of Law University of BelgradeTY - JOUR AU - Popović, Dušan AU - Caka, Fjoralba PY - 2017 UR - https://ralf.ius.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/956 AB - The South-East European (SEE) countries, having signed Stabilisation and Association Agreements with the European Union, are required to establish an operationally independent state aid monitoring authority, to harmonise their legislative framework with that of the EU, and to demonstrate a credible enforcement record. This paper analyses whether these requirements for EU accession have been achieved so far. The authors conducted a comparative cross-country analysis and tried to identify common problems and enforcement trends. As the paper elucidates, the SEE countries have largely met the EU requirements by harmonising their national state aid acts and corresponding by-laws with EU law. However, these rules are applied in a different socio-economic context and by national authorities of dubious independence from the government, which results in a modest enforcement record. As may be derived from the pre-accession experience of the countries of Central and Eastern Europe, the effectiveness of state aid control mechanisms is conditioned by the credibility of the country's EU perspective. And the South-East European countries have only just started their European journey. PB - Springer, New York T2 - European Business Organization Law Review T1 - State Aid Control in South-East Europe: Waiting for a Wake-up Call EP - 349 IS - 2 SP - 333 VL - 18 DO - 10.1007/s40804-017-0069-z UR - conv_2955 ER -
@article{ author = "Popović, Dušan and Caka, Fjoralba", year = "2017", abstract = "The South-East European (SEE) countries, having signed Stabilisation and Association Agreements with the European Union, are required to establish an operationally independent state aid monitoring authority, to harmonise their legislative framework with that of the EU, and to demonstrate a credible enforcement record. This paper analyses whether these requirements for EU accession have been achieved so far. The authors conducted a comparative cross-country analysis and tried to identify common problems and enforcement trends. As the paper elucidates, the SEE countries have largely met the EU requirements by harmonising their national state aid acts and corresponding by-laws with EU law. However, these rules are applied in a different socio-economic context and by national authorities of dubious independence from the government, which results in a modest enforcement record. As may be derived from the pre-accession experience of the countries of Central and Eastern Europe, the effectiveness of state aid control mechanisms is conditioned by the credibility of the country's EU perspective. And the South-East European countries have only just started their European journey.", publisher = "Springer, New York", journal = "European Business Organization Law Review", title = "State Aid Control in South-East Europe: Waiting for a Wake-up Call", pages = "349-333", number = "2", volume = "18", doi = "10.1007/s40804-017-0069-z", url = "conv_2955" }
Popović, D.,& Caka, F.. (2017). State Aid Control in South-East Europe: Waiting for a Wake-up Call. in European Business Organization Law Review Springer, New York., 18(2), 333-349. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40804-017-0069-z conv_2955
Popović D, Caka F. State Aid Control in South-East Europe: Waiting for a Wake-up Call. in European Business Organization Law Review. 2017;18(2):333-349. doi:10.1007/s40804-017-0069-z conv_2955 .
Popović, Dušan, Caka, Fjoralba, "State Aid Control in South-East Europe: Waiting for a Wake-up Call" in European Business Organization Law Review, 18, no. 2 (2017):333-349, https://doi.org/10.1007/s40804-017-0069-z ., conv_2955 .