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Mutual Recognition: economic and regulatory logic in goods and services

Jacques Pelkmans
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Jacques Pelkmans: Senior Research Fellow, CEPS (Brussels); Visiting Professor, Department of European Economic Studies, College of Europe (Bruges)

No 24, Bruges European Economic Research Papers from European Economic Studies Department, College of Europe

Abstract: Mutual recognition is one of the most appreciated innovations of the EU. The idea is that one can pursue market integration, indeed "deep' market integration, while respecting 'diversity' amongst the participating countries. Put differently, in pursuing 'free movement' for goods, mutual recognition facilitates free movement by disciplining the nature and scope of 'regulatory barriers', whilst allowing some degree of regulatory discretion for EU Member States. This paper attempts to explain the rationale and logic of mutual recognition in the EU internal goods market, its working in actual practice for about three decades now, culminating in a qualitative cost/benefit analysis and its recent improvement in terms of 'governance' in the so-called New Legislative Framework (first denoted as the 2008 Goods package) thereby ameliorating the benefits/costs ratio. For new (in contrast to existing) national regulation, the intrusive EU procedure to impose mutual recognition is presented as well, with basic data so as to show its critical importance to keep the internal goods market free. All this is complemented by a short summary of the scant economic literature on mutual recognition. Subsequently, the analysis is extended to the internal market for services. This is done in two steps, first by reminding the debate on the origin principle (which goes further than mutual recognition EU-style) and how mutual recognition works under the horizontal services directive. This is followed by a short section on how mutual recognition works in vertical (i.e. sectoral) services markets.

Keywords: mutual recognition; EU internal market; free movement of goods; free movement of services. (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: F15 F23 K2 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 40 pages
Date: 2012-06
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (6)

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