New Paper: Assessing Public Administration’s Intention in EU Economic Law: Chasing Ghosts or Dressing Windows?

I have uploaded a new paper on SSRN that explores the issue of the assessment of 'intention' for the purposes of enforcing EU economic law against the public administration.

The paper looks at public procurement and State aid rules as two examples of areas of EU economic law subjected to interpretative and enforcement difficulties due to the introduction, sometimes veiled, of subjective elements in their main prohibitions. The paper establishes parallels with other areas of EU economic law, such as antitrust and non-discrimination law, and seeks benchmarks to support the main thesis that such intentional elements need to be ‘objectified’, so that EU economic law can be enforced against the public administration to an adequate standard of legal certainty. This mirrors the development of the doctrine of abuse of EU law, where a similar ‘objectification’ in the assessment of subjective elements has taken place.

The paper draws on the case law of the Court of Justice of the European Union to support such ‘objectification’ of intentional elements in EU economic law, and highlights how the Court has been engaging in such interpretative strategy for quite a long time. It then goes on to explore the interplay between such an approach and more general protections against behaviour of a public administration in breach of EU law: ie the right to good administration in Article 41 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union, and the doctrine of State liability for infringement of EU law. The paper concludes with the normative recommendation that EU economic law should be free from subjective elements in its main prohibitions.
 
The full reference is: A Sanchez-Graells, 'Assessing Public Administration’s Intention in EU Economic Law: Chasing Ghosts or Dressing Windows?' (August 7, 2015). Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2641051.

New paper on the continuing relevance of general principles of EU public procurement after the Concessions Directive

I have just uploded on the University of Leicester School of Law Research Paper SSRN series a new article on "The Continuing Relevance of the General Principles of EU Public Procurement Law after the Adoption of the 2014 Concessions Directive", which follows up on my criticism of the adoption of this regulatory instrument when it was first proposed [see A Sanchez-Graells, "What Need and Logic for a New Directive on Concessions, Particularly Regarding the Issue of their Economic Balance?" (2012) 2 European Public Private Partnership Law Review 94-104].

This new paper aims to offer some further reflections on the legal relevance of general principles of EU public procurement law after the adoption of the 2014 package of substantive Directives on public procurement. It focusses on the field of concession contracts because one of the explicit justifications for the adoption of Directive 2014/23 was to achieve a "uniform application of the principles of the TFEU across all Member States and the elimination of discrepancies in the understanding of those principles … at Union level in order to eliminate persisting distortions of the internal market". 

The paper claims that Directive 2014/23 has failed on three grounds. Firstly, because it has not created any relevant substantive harmonisation of tender requirements for concessions that fall within its scope of application. Secondly, because it cannot limit the CJEU’s extension of obligations derived from general principles beyond its scope of application. And, thirdly, because it fails to acknowledge all general principles of EU public procurement law and, in particular, the principle of competition—creating a risk of inconsistency with the rest of the 2014 Procurement Package.

The full citation for the paper is A Sanchez-Graells, "The Continuing Relevance of the General Principles of EU Public Procurement Law after the Adoption of the 2014 Concessions Directive" (March 20, 2015). University of Leicester School of Law Research Paper No. 15-12. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2581683. I will be preseting it at the Public Procurement: Global Revolution VII conference in June 2015 at the University of Nottingham.

Unacceptable pull back of Erasmus grants in Spain

The Spanish government has decided to change the rules applicable to Erasmus funding for exchange students midway the academic year. It has now announced a cut in its contribution to the Erasmus fund that will leave thounsands of Spanish students currently enrolled in programmes abroad without funding that had been pre-approved (see the coverage by The Guardian).
 
In my view, this is a myopic measure that breaches the most basic guarantee of legal certainty and legitimate expectations. It also shows a significant disregard for one of the most popular mechanisms of development of a true European demos and one of the more palpable examples of the potential implications of the European Citizenship enshrined in Article 20 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union. Deplorable!