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Intercontinental regulation of civil aviation

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Adrienne H ritier EUI, Florence. Yannis Karagiannis, IBEI Barcelona. 3. Research Question ... European Union and the United States finally signed an Open Skies ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Intercontinental regulation of civil aviation


1
Intercontinental regulationof civil aviation
  • Bargaining and Implementing the Open Skies
    Agreement

2
  • Adrienne Héritier EUI, Florence
  • Yannis Karagiannis, IBEI Barcelona

3
  • Research Question
  • European Union and the United States finally
    signed an Open Skies Agreement (OSA) in 2007
  • Parties with mixed motives bargaining process
    both gain from successful outcome
  • both feared giving up too much.

4
  • Outcome biased in favour of U.S.
  • Therefore EU only concluded under condition of
    re-negotiation
  • RQ 1 do negotiations stage two lead to more
    symmetrical outcome?

5
  • Outcome provides for convergence mechanism to
    produce mutual rapprochement of EU and US
    regulation
  • RQ 2 Does joint decision committee produce
    decisions indicating more convergence?

6
  • RQ 1 and RQ 2 linked
  • Decisions of joint decision committee (RQ 2)
  • feed back into stage-two negotiations (RQ 1)

7
  • RQ 1 Why did the agreement grant US airlines
    rights that it did not recognize to their
    European counterparts?
  • Why EU stand a better chance now for a more
    symmetric outcome?
  • How do changed macro-institutional conditions
    affect re-bargaining process?
  • How do different actor preferences affect
    outcome?

8
  • RQ 2Regulatory convergence mechanism as a case
    of intercontinental regulatory policy-making.
  • Do decision-making rules affect the probability
    of successful policy decisions?
  • What explains the observed variation in
    convergence scores between different policy
    areas?
  • Why do implementation decisions sometimes fall on
    regular bureaucrats and sometimes on
    national-level politicians?

9
Background information
  • Cooperative marketing arrangements for code
    sharing, franchising, and leasing.
  • Cooperative joint committee to further airline
    deregulation
  • Guarantees for US investors to participate as
    minority shareholders in any majority-EU-owned
    airline
  • Restatement of US investment policy in US
    airlines (25 legislated cap on voting equity,
    25-minus-one-share regulatory cap on non-voting
    equity)
  • For EU carriers ability to operate flights
    between any EU member state and the US
  • EU carriers can carry certain Fly America traffic
  • EU cargo carriers operate flights between
    third-party states and the US

10
  • From the EU perspective
  • outcome of 2007 biased in favour of the US
  • - namely cabotage (i.e. the right of a foreign
    carrier to operate purely domestic flights)
  • and ownership rights (i.e. the right of a foreign
    carrier to acquire a domestic carrier).
  • Therefore, re-negotiation condition under which
    EU accepted the biased negotiation outcome of
    OSA 2007.
  • Since May 2008 negotiating OSA stage two approval
    in November 2010.

11
  • OSA traffic liberalization subject to jointly
    agreed regulatory provisions convergence.
  • within a converging international regulatory
    framework
  • air carriers can make use of the new
    opportunities from agreement to improve their
    market positions and increase transatlantic
    capacity.
  • OSA takes highly unusual step of establishing
    common decision-making institutions in view of
    achieving full-range regulatory convergence.

12
  • This applies to such diverse policy areas as
  • (a) competition and state subsidies,
  • (b) ownership and control,
  • (c) environmental standards,
  • (d) security
  • (e) health and safety,
  • (f) consumer protection.

13
Theory and hypotheses
  • Assumptions
  • Firms
  • First political agreement necessary because
    airlines do not agree on their own
  • - because the financially strong carriers do not
    commit to not acquire the weaker ones,
  • - and the weaker ones do not commit to not lobby
    governments for special treatment.
  • Second, aviation sector never relatively free
    market
  • - . vested interests stronger than
    universalistic or consumer interests.

14
  • Third, we assume that liberalization is the
    result of the wish of comparatively better
    endowed or richer airlines looking for new growth
    opportunities.
  • Political actors
  • Fourth, officials are policy oriented and
    politicians are voter oriented
  • Fifth, elected or politically accountable
    negotiators are more risk averse than unelected
    officials.
  • Finally, adapting to regulations may be
    costly, and adapting to more stringent
    regulations more costly than relaxing regulations
    once one has adapted to them.

15
  • Each bargaining situation
  • We focus on two bargaining situations and the
    link between the two
  • (a) a market in which actors differ along their
    capital endowments, and the stringency of the
    regulations they have had to adjust to
  • (b) a bargaining situation in which negotiators
    differ according to the constituencies they are
    accountable to, and their respective regulatory
    backgrounds.

16
  • power-based bargaining argument
  • Applied to
  • negotiations a) in the joint decision-making
    committee
  • and b) the stage-two negotiations

17
  • All actors jointly profit from liberalization
  • However, benefits not evenly distributed.
  • Distributional consequences of different types of
    liberalization agreements for different actors,
    e.g. different types of airlines, different types
    of negotiators.
  • Different redistributive consequences
    (redistributive in terms of votes or policy)
    will inform the strategies that different actors
    follow

18
Hypotheses
  • first varying macro institutional aspects
  • holding constant preferences of actors
  • three important macro-factors in the environment
    assuming unanimity/consensus
  • structure of the agenda (single issue or multiple
    issues),
  • the finiteness of the negotiations (plus
    sanctions in case of non-agreement)
  • and the number of veto-players in a polity.

19
  • H1 Under a multi-issue agenda the negotiation
    outcome ceteris paribus will be characterized by
    a more equitable distribution of the surplus of
    the bargaining process, i.e. a specific actor
    will gain more on some issues, but less on others.

20
  • H2 If there is only one bargaining round with a
    set time limit and credible threats of suspension
    of previous agreements, the likeliness of
    regulatory convergence is higher.

21
  • H3 The actor from the polity with many
    veto-players will ceteris paribus prevail in the
    negotiation process and shape its outcomes
  • H3.1 Multiple domestic veto-players may weaken
    a negotiator and accordingly influence outcomes.

22
  • H4 The negotiators of the polity with the
    financially sound carriers will ceteris paribus
    seek to accelerate measures of liberalization of
    market access and ownership and control

23
  • H5 If negotiators of the polity with the lenient
    market-correcting regulation will prevail in
    negotiations ceteris paribus transatlantic
    market-correcting regulation will be limited.
  • H6 If the negotiators of the two polities are
    confronted with similar wide and diverse
    constituencies they will be more likely to agree
    on converging regulation

24
  • H7 In bargaining rounds dominated by bureaucrats
    (in politically non-salient issue areas)
    regulatory convergence is reached more easily
    than in bargaining rounds dominated by
    politicians (in politically salient issue areas)

25
Empirical Considerations issues on agenda/basis
for case selection
  • 1 Ownership and control restrictions on US
    carriers
  • 2 Cooperation between competition authorities
  • 3 Further extension of traffic rights
  • - Cabotage
  • - Government financed air transportation
  • - Provision of aircraft with crew (wet leasing)

26
  • 4 Infrastructure constraints on traffic rights
  • - Night flight restrictions
  • - Aviation Traffic Management ATM
  • - Slot allocation
  • - Ground handling
  • 5 Environmental regulation
  • - Emission trading system
  • - Night flight restrictions

27
  • 6 Security
  • - one-stop security
  • 7 Safety
  • - 2008 Aviation Safety Agreement
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