Publisher's Synopsis
In considering either the EU Services Directive or WTO rules on
services, it is clear that the goal in each case is the same: the removal of
obstacles to the free movement of services. However, a number of formidable
forces – including the anti-globalisation movement, other civil society
groups, and some EU Member States – have raised concerns regarding the effect
of liberalization of services on the quality and availability of public
services such as health care and education, and the compatibility of such
liberalization with social policy objectives. Thus it is clear that the
central question at both EU and WTO level is how to balance the proper
functioning of the services market and the realization of general interest
issues.
This book, which is the outcome of a 2006 conference organized by the Europa Institute of Utrecht and edited at the Radboud University Nijmegen, makes a major contribution to improving the understanding of services liberalization and its limits in both the scholarly and public debate. Eleven well-known authorities in European and international (economic) law deal incisively with such crucial issues as the following:
- the influence of the EU Services Directive on the national legal orders of the Member States;
- the relationship between EU law on the liberalization of services and fundamental rights;
- the case law of the ECJ on services of general economic interest;
- prospects for harmonization of services of general economic interest at EU level;
- the impact of public procurement law on services;
- interrelation of WTO rules and the EU law on services; and
- how public interest issues are accommodated in WTO law.
It is surprising that, as the services sector plays a major role in Europe’s economy, legal scholarship in this area is so sparse. This in-depth examination of tensions emerging between the goals of the European market and general interest objectives at the level of the Member States fills an important need for lawyers, policymakers, officials, and academics striving to clarify and formulate effective principles and rules in this important area of the European and global economies.