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Structural guarantees for the state aid field. The community's last best hope against national arbitrariness

Author

Summary, in English

In line with current tendencies of ‘new modes of governance’, this essay introduces judicial tools, which strike a balance between the respect for national autonomy in individual assessments and the effective implementation of Community law. The balance is struck through the demands of structural guarantees; administrative safeguards, which weed out arbitrary national decision-making. These administrative safeguards are particularly needed in areas where the Member States of the EU have been granted a wide margin of discretion.



Examples of demands for structural guarantees are the provision of

transparent and accessible legislation and administrative procedures based on objective criteria, as well as the access to effective judicial review. Together, they create a system of checks to prevent the discretion from turning into arbitrariness. All of these demands are ultimately emanating from the principle of rule of law, on which the European Community is said to be founded.

The existence of the demands for structural guarantees, unfortunately

constituting somewhat of an elusive ‘non-concept’ in legal doctrine, is firmly

established in this essay – through a study of their nature, as well as their

functioning. The use of structural guarantees, as a tool of judicial review, is

legitimised through their umbilical cord to the rule of law. Different

emanations of the rule of law; exemplified by the principle of equality,

effectiveness, as well as other general principles of Community law (GPCL),

are presented to give a comprehensive overview of the substantive content of

the structural guarantees. As the function of the structural guaranteesrequirements

in a judicial review is, inevitably, linked to that of GPCL in

general, the latter is used as a starting-point for the examination of the function

of structural guarantees. The case-law of the ECJ has been researched to

provide a cross-section of relevant examples of how the structural guarantees

work as a judicial tool, in practice. To conclude the probe into the specific

function of structural guarantees, the particular importance of this judicial tool,

in cases of high Member State discretion, is accentuated.



To further exemplify the introduction of structural guarantees, by the ECJ, the

developments concerning compensation of services of general economic

interest (SGEIs) are presented. The focal point being the structural demands of

the Altmark case, which are, subsequently, examined and analysed against the

intended function of structural guarantees.

Publishing year

2011

Language

English

Publication/Series

CFE Working Papers series

Issue

46

Document type

Working paper

Publisher

Centre for European Studies, Lund university

Topic

  • Law

Keywords

  • state aid
  • general principles of union law
  • general principles of Community law
  • services of general economic interest
  • EU-rätt
  • EU law
  • proportionality
  • good governance
  • structural guarantees
  • judicial review
  • SGEI
  • transparency
  • arbitrary
  • rule of law
  • discretion
  • objective criteria
  • Altmark

Status

Published

Research group

  • EU Law