The regulation of professional services has been high on the political agenda for years now in Europe. This paper points out the methods of working and the strategies used by the European Commission (Directorate General for Competition) and various national competition authorities to promote deregu-lation of the professions throughout the European Union. Central to this dis-cussion are the so-called public interest and private interest approaches to regulation. On the one hand, the European Commission seems to have been influenced by developments in particular Member States (bottom-up effects), whereas on the other hand, there have been top-down effects in recent years, at least in some Member States. The European experience is used to stud...
Traditionally, medicine and law have not been subjected to the competitive forces that operate in co...
In this paper we provide a cross-country comparison of occupational regulation in the European legal...
With the Chinese government planning a comprehensive and detailed reform of regulatory law, the Euro...
The regulation of professional services has been high on the political agenda for years now in Europ...
The regulation of professional services has been high on the political agenda for years now in Europ...
Cahier de recherche du Groupe HEC Paris, n° 950/2011Some characteristics of the regulated profession...
textabstractThis article starts by discussing a number of public interest explanations for regulatin...
Representatives of liberal professions (notaries, bailiffs, attorneys, architects, auditors, medical...
The European Competition Law Annual 2004 is ninth in a series of volumes following the annual worksh...
International audienceThis paper endeavours to analyse self regulation through the prism of the regu...
This chapter addresses business restrictions (defined as restrictions to alternative business struct...
This paper is intended as a contribution to that growing literature which seeks to understand the Eu...
The tension between the public interest to regulate professions, and the economic rationales to open...
Defence date: 18 November 2013Examining Board: Professor Petros C. Mavroidis, EUI (Supervisor) Prof...
Traditionally, medicine and law have not been subjected to the competitive forces that operate in co...
In this paper we provide a cross-country comparison of occupational regulation in the European legal...
With the Chinese government planning a comprehensive and detailed reform of regulatory law, the Euro...
The regulation of professional services has been high on the political agenda for years now in Europ...
The regulation of professional services has been high on the political agenda for years now in Europ...
Cahier de recherche du Groupe HEC Paris, n° 950/2011Some characteristics of the regulated profession...
textabstractThis article starts by discussing a number of public interest explanations for regulatin...
Representatives of liberal professions (notaries, bailiffs, attorneys, architects, auditors, medical...
The European Competition Law Annual 2004 is ninth in a series of volumes following the annual worksh...
International audienceThis paper endeavours to analyse self regulation through the prism of the regu...
This chapter addresses business restrictions (defined as restrictions to alternative business struct...
This paper is intended as a contribution to that growing literature which seeks to understand the Eu...
The tension between the public interest to regulate professions, and the economic rationales to open...
Defence date: 18 November 2013Examining Board: Professor Petros C. Mavroidis, EUI (Supervisor) Prof...
Traditionally, medicine and law have not been subjected to the competitive forces that operate in co...
In this paper we provide a cross-country comparison of occupational regulation in the European legal...
With the Chinese government planning a comprehensive and detailed reform of regulatory law, the Euro...