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Commodifying public utilities: EU’s new governance prescriptions for rail and water
Author(s)
Date Issued
2025-01-11
Date Available
2024-12-04T17:02:51Z
Abstract
In the mid-2000s, the Single Market Program and European Monetary Union lost momentum, as public services advocates increasingly succeeded in tempering attempts to liberalize public utilities through legislative amendments and Court of Justice rulings. After the 2008 crisis, however, the EU's shift to a new economic governance (NEG) regime provided EU executives with a new tool to advance their objectives. Unlike EU directives, country-specific NEG prescriptions require neither the approval of the European Parliament nor their transposition into law, making it more difficult for social forces to contest them. Our analysis of NEG prescriptions for public utilities in two sectors (rail and water) and four countries (Germany, Ireland, Italy, Romania) across 10 years (2009–2019) shows that the shift to NEG provided EU executives with new extra-parliamentarian and extra-juridical tools that allowed them to revive their stalled commodification agenda; at the price of accentuating the EU's democratic and justice deficits.
Sponsorship
European Research Council
European Commission Horizon 2020
Other Sponsorship
Open access funding provided by IReL
University College Dublin. School of Business
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Wiley
Journal
Governance
Volume
38
Issue
1
Start Page
1
End Page
12
Copyright (Published Version)
2025 the Authors
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
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Name
Golden-et-al_2025_Commodifying-Public-Utilities.pdf
Size
619.54 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
dc0af0694a07c86e11ab81e18740e45e
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