Regulating Europe

“Regulating Europe” by Pio Baake, published by Psychology Press in 1996, explores the evolving landscape of economic and social regulation in Europe at both national and EU levels. This 315-page work examines how statutory regulation, enforced by independent regulatory bodies, is increasingly supplanting older forms of state intervention and the redistributive policies associated with the Keynesian welfare state. The book provides a theoretical framework for understanding the emergence of the regulatory state and highlights the parallel policy developments occurring across various European nations.
Readers will find a detailed analysis divided into three parts. The first part lays the theoretical groundwork, introducing a new model of demand and supply for Community regulation. The subsequent sections present case studies from the UK, Germany, France, Spain, and the EU, illustrating specific regulatory policies and institutions. The book also evaluates current developments in policy and institutions, emphasizing the challenges of democratic accountability faced by independent agencies. Baake suggests that the integration of national and supranational regulators through “regulatory networks” may offer a more effective solution than merely re-nationalizing European policies.
Official synopsis Publisher
Regulating Europe explains why economic and social regulation is rapidly becoming the new frontier of public policy and public administration in Europe, both at the national and EU levels. Statutory regulation, implemented by independent regulatory bodies, is replacing not only older forms of state intervention but also, to some extent, the redistributive policies of the welfare state. Thus Regulating Europe is an examiniation of the emergence of the regulatory state as the successor of the Keynesian welfare state of the past. Contributions emphasize the parallelism of policy developments at the national and European levels. Part one provides the necessary theoretical background, including a new model of demand and supply of Community regulation. The second part presents a series of case studies of particular regulatory policies and institutions in the UK, Germany, France, Spain and the EU. Part three evaluates current policy and institutional developments, pointing out how the lack of a tradition of statutory regulation in Europe affects the design of the new institutions. Special attention is devoted to the issue of the democratic accountability of expert, politically independent agencies – a problem which, contrary to widespread opinion, is as severe at the national level as it is in Brussels. It is suggested that the requirements of democratic accountability, and of subsidiarity, cannot be met by re-nationalizing European policies, much less by increasing the current level of centralization. A more promising solution is the development of “regulatory networks” closely integrating national and supranational regulators. Pio Baake, Humboldt University, Berlin; Robert Baldwin, London School of Economics and Political Science; Lluis Cases, Universidad Autonoma of Barcelona; Fabrice Demarigny …
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