7: The European Court of Justice - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 47
About This Presentation
Title:

7: The European Court of Justice

Description:

qB=Output with maximal. budget. 6. Counter-measures of the principal I ' ... account of the opinion delivered' and inform the committee of the manner in ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:64
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 48
Provided by: FSC1112
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: 7: The European Court of Justice


1
7 The European Court of Justice
European Co-operation and Integration
2.06.2009
Universität Konstanz, Dept. Politics and
ManagementSummer 2009Gerald Schneider
2
Outline
  • The Formal Power and Structure of the ECJ
  • Master or Servant? The Power of the ECJ
  • Short Examination

3
Administrative Decision Making The
Principal-Agent Problem
  • ..there is always some conflict between the
    interests of those who delegate authority
    (principals) and the agents to whom they delegate
    it. Agents behave opportunistically, pursuing
    their own interests subject only to the
    constraints imposed by the relationship with the
    principal. The opportunism that generates agency
    losses is an ubiquitous feature of the human
    experience. Kiewit/McCubbins 1991. The Logic of
    Delegation. Chicago University of Chicago press.
  • In the EU, delegation problems are paramount
    because of the multitude of principals. If these
    principals disagree, the constraints on the
    agents are less severe.

4
Delegation problems with multiple principals
Bureaucratic drift
P3
A
P1
P2
5
Budget maximization The Niskanen model
CEMarginal benefit of bureaucratic
output AMMarginal costs qBOutput with maximal
budget
Quelle Breton/ Wintrobe JPE 1975
6
Counter-measures of the principal I
"The most direct way to control agencies is for
today's authorities to specify, in excruciating
detail, precisely what the agency is to do and
how it is to do it, leaving as little as possible
to the discretionary judgment of bureaucrats -
and thus as little as possible for future
authorities to exercise control over, short of
passing legislation ... Terry Moe 1990.
"Political Institutions The Neglected Side of
the Story." Journal of Law, Economics, and
Organization 6213-53.
7
Counter-measures of the principal II
  • Ex ante design of institutions (e.g. extent of
    discretionary power, legal instruments)
  • Selection of agents
  • 3) Accountability measures
  • 4) Monitoring
  • a) "Fire-alarms" (outside supervision)
  • b) Controlling through other institutions (court
    of auditors, parliament)
  • c) "Police patrols" (inside supervisiondirect
    supervision of agent)

8
Two views on delegation
  • The traditional view the most direct way to
    control agencies is for todays authorities to
    specify, in excruciating detail, precisely what
    the agency is to do and how it is to do it,
    leaving as little as possible to the
    discretionary judgments of bureaucrats and thus
    as little as possible for future authorities to
    exercise control over, short of passing
    legislationTerry Moe 1990. Political
    Institutions The Neglected Side of the Story.
    Journal of Law, Economics, and Organization
    6213-53.
  • A transaction cost perspective Policy can be
    made either through direct legislation or by
    delegation to the executive branch There are
    political transaction costs associated with
    either option the costs of making policy
    internally come from the inefficiencies of the
    committee system, while the problems of
    delegation stem mainly from Congresss principal
    agent problems of oversight and control the
    boundaries of the administrative state will be
    determined by the trade-off between these two
    sets of transaction costs.David Epstein/Sharyn
    OHalloran 1999. Delegating Powers. Cambridge
    CUP.

9
Delegation in the EU Comitology
  • Most EU regulation in not enacted as legislation
    by the Council and Parliament but as
    implementation measures under the executive
    duties of the Commission. Such regulation can be
    adopted when the Council has conferred executive
    powers on the Commission and after an
    implementation committee, composed of policy
    experts from the Member States, has given its
    opinion on or approved the Commission's proposed
    measures. The committee procedures are commonly
    referred to as "comitology".Source
    http//www.euractiv.com/en/governance/comitology/a
    rticle-117454

10
Comitology Types of Committees I
  • Advisory committees following draft measures by
    the Commission, the committee delivers its
    opinion within a certain time limit "if necessary
    by taking a vote" (simple majority). The
    Commission is to take the "utmost account of the
    opinion delivered" and inform the committee of
    the manner in which its opinion has been taken
    into account. This procedure is generally used
    when the policy matters considered are not very
    sensitive politically
  • Management committees where the measures adopted
    by the Commission are not consistent with the
    committee's opinion (delivered by qualified
    majority), the Commission must communicate them
    to the Council which, acting by a qualified
    majority, can take a different decision. This
    procedure is used in particular for measures
    relating to the management of the Common
    Agricultural Policy, fisheries and the main
    Community programmes

11
Comitology Types of Committees I
  • Regulatory committees the Commission can adopt
    implementing measures only if it obtains the
    approval of the committee (voting by qualified
    majority). In the absence of this approval, the
    proposed measure is referred back to the Council
    which takes a decision by qualified majority.
    However, if the Council does not take a decision,
    the Commission can adopt the measure provided
    that the Council does not object by a qualified
    majority. This procedure is used for measures
    relating to protection of the health or safety of
    persons, animals and plants and measures amending
    non-essential provisions of the basic legislative
    instruments.

12
The Efficiency of Delegation in the European Union
  • there seems to be a more general trade-off in
    the design of EU institutions. On the one hand,
    the monopoly proposal power is a powerful
    resource for the Commission. It leads to high and
    stable degrees of discretion. On the other hand,
    implementation committees are equally powerful
    mechanisms of control, especially because used by
    many principals Comitology balances the
    Commissions initiations power and its bias for
    legislative intervention. A reform towards less
    restrictive committee procedures should probably
    be linked to a reform of the legislative
    prerogatives of the Commission such as the
    conferral of the power of initiation upon the
    Council of Ministers and the Parliament.
  • Fabio Franchino 2000. The Commissions
    Executive Discretion, Information and
    Comitology. Journal of Theoretical Politics
    12/2155-81.

13
Two interpretations of comitology
1. Comitology as a discussion forum Comitology
"is a rather normal tool of the policy maker and
policy implementer, namely the convening of
groups through which the Commission discusses ...
the progress of policy implementation." Quelle
Fiona Hayes-Renshaw/Helen Wallace 1997. The
Council of Ministers. London Macmillan. 2.
Comitology as a means to supervise the agent
"The likelihood that a restrictive committee is
preferred to a permissive one increases as either
uncertainty of or conflict among Union
legislators deepen. "Conflict and uncertainty
are also important factors affecting the degree
of stringency in control. Quelle Fabio
Franchino 2000. European Union Politics
14
Delegation as a consequence of uncertainty and
conflict (Franchino EUP 2000)
15
Delegation to National Administrations (Franchino
2007, CUP)
16
Summary
The Council will delegate greater discretionary
authority to the Commission in acts adopted under
qualified majority voting, and issue areas that
require general and managerial skills at the
supranational level it will delegate greater
executive discretion to the member states in acts
adopted under unanimity, and in issue areas that
require specialized and technical
knowledge. intergovernmentalist expectations
seem validated because, if decision rules
reflect underlying preferences and distributive
elements, these results produce a set of policy
outcomes that broadly match member states
intent. Fabio Franchino 2004. Delegating Powers
in the in the European Community. BJPS
34269-293.
17
Regulatory Policy Making The Stigler-Peltzman
approach
Monopoly regulators set a price such that the
marginal gain in support from the producers for
an increment in monopoly rents, R, is just offset
by the loss in consumer votes... ...the
vote-maximizing politician may favor the
regulated industrys producers, but stops short
of setting price at the rent maximizing level
regulation brings price to a level somewhere
between the pure monopoly and pure competition
prices....By this argument, Peltzmann helps to
explain the ubiquitous regulation of agriculture
around the world and other interventions in
seemingly competitive industries like trucking
and taxicabs. Source Dennis C. Mueller 2003.
Public Choice III. CUP
18
Political economy of regulation logrolling
...a winning coalition in the legislature of the
central government exploits the potential
inherent in the majority rule and provides the
local public good to only its members and/or
provides these goods using discriminatory tax
formulas. This sort of tyranny by the majority
coalition has obvious attractions for its members
but, given the high probabilities of cycling, it
also has its risks. The representative or party
that finds itself in a winning coaltion today may
be on the losing side tomorrow. ...Often the
effect of geographic representation seems not to
be that a particular public good is provided by
the central government to each local community,
but that different local public goods are
provided. Each representative in the federal
legislature proposes a pet project that her
constituents would like to see the federal
government finance. Source Dennis C. Mueller
2003. Public Choice III. CUP
19
An example of the politcal economy approach
fishing policy
Ministers increase TAC to a lesser extent when
they care more about protecting the environment.
The impact is not negligible. Let us consider
the two extreme values of Environment. The
increase in TAC when the concern for the
environment was at its lowest in 1984 was almost
three thousand tons more than when such concern
was at its highest, in 1991. .
left-wingministers or those less supportive of
fishermen/farmers tend toaugment TAC to a lesser
extent only as the number of statesincreases.
.. the mere addition of one interest around a
specific species leads to an increase in the
proposed quantity of TAC of about 370 tons. This
is equivalent to Germanys 1999 cod quota for the
Skagerrak. Franchino/Rahming 2003
20
(No Transcript)
21
Federalism and redistribution
Source Rodden 2002
22
Federalism and redistribution II
  • The empirical analysis demonstrates a close
    connection between the distribution of votes and
    fiscal transfers in the legislative institutions
    of the European Union. Other things equal, small
    member states with more votes and relative voting
    power per capita are favored in the distribution
    of transfers. This relationship has held up
    through successive enlargements. Perhaps these
    results should not be surprising. Large states
    might desire the gains associated with forming
    and deepening a federal unionso much so that
    they are willing to pay off fearful, indifferent,
    or simply manipulative states. Perhaps when such
    states are offered more votes per capita in the
    initial bargain, fiscal redistribution in the
    future is an implicit part of the offer.
  • J. Rodden 2002 EUP

23
(No Transcript)
24
Portfolio Distribution in the Commission Theory
  • Gamsons Law Distribution according to share of
    a party in the parliament any participant will
    expect others to demand from a coalition a share
    of the payoff proportional to the amount of
    resources which they contribute to a coalition
    (Gamson 1961).
  • Bargainining in legislature theory (Baron and
    Ferejohn 1989) distribution according to the
    voting weights with an advantage for the
    proposer Source F. Francino 2009, EJPR

25
Source Franchino 2009, EJPR
26
Portfolio Distribution in the Commission Results
  • Support for both Gamsons law and bargaining
    theory with a slight predictive advantage for the
    latter
  • Experience in a specific portfolio also matters
  • Commissioners are appointed to some extent to
    portfolios that are linked to dimensions on which
    they are moderates
  • Some ideologocial distributions left-right
    portfolios are given to Commissioners with a
    specific left-right agenda, but at a certain
    level experience is much more important Source
    F. Franchino 2009, EJPR

27
The Importance of Ideology in the European
Commission
Source H. Döring 2007, EUP
28
(No Transcript)
29
Structure and Decision Making
  • Court of Justice- 15 judges, 9 advocates
    general, 1 Chancellor - 6 chambers each
    comprising 3 to 5 judges
  • Court of First Instance - 15 judges - 4
    chambers each comprising 3 to 5 judges
  • Decision making mode- 6 (4) Chambers - The
    Court of Justice decides in a plenary session in
    case a EU institution demands it

30
Responsibilites, Functions, Procedures
  • Responsibilities- Action for failure to fulfill
    Treaty obligation - Action for annulment
    (judicial review) - Action for failure to act
    (against EU institutions) - Action for damages
    (against EU institutions or servant -
    Preliminary rulings on the interpretations or
    validity of Community law- Appeals against
    judgments of the Court of First Instance-
    Actions for annulment etc. brought by natural and
    legal persons (Court of First Instance)
  • Functions- Constitutional Court/Administrative
    Court/Civil Court - Arbitration
  • Procedures- Decisions on disputes- Decisions on
    matters that other courts do not want to decide
    without the opinion of the Court

31
Examples
  • Nº 33/2004 29 April 2004 Judgment of the Court
    of Justice in Case C-476/01 Kapper Transport
  • A MEMBER STATE IS NOT ENTITLED TO REFUSE TO
    RECOGNISE A DRIVING LICENCE ISSUED BY ANOTHER
    MEMBER STATE ON THE GROUND THAT, ACCORDING TO THE
    INFORMATION AVAILABLE TO THE FIRST MEMBER STATE,
    THE HOLDER HAD NOT, WHEN THE LICENCE WAS ISSUED,
    TAKEN UP NORMAL RESIDENCE IN THE MEMBER STATE
    WHICH ISSUED THE LICENCE

32
..
  • COURT OF JUSTICE
  • Tuesday 20 June
  • Grand Chamber
  • 09.30            Hearing C-265/05 Perez
    NaranjoSocial security for migrant
    workersReference for a preliminary ruling - Cour
    de cassation - Civil chamber - Paris -
    Interpretation of Articles 4(2a), 10a., 19(1) and
    95b of Council Regulation (EEC) No 1408/71 of 14
    June 1971 on the application of social security
    schemes to employed persons and their families
    moving within the Community (OJ English Special
    Edition 1971 (II), p. 416), as amended - National
    legislation making the grant of supplementary
    allowance from the National Solidarity Fund
    subject to a residence condition - Concept of a
    special non-contributory benefit - Listing of the
    allowance in Annex IIa to Regulation (EEC) No
    1408/71

33
Landmark decisions
  • 1962 Van Gend en Loos Direct precedence of
    certain treaty regulations
  • 1964 Costa/ENEL Precedence of EU law over
    national law
  • 1971 AETRMember states are not bound by
    inconsistent rules
  • 1978 Simmenthal Direct precedence of EU law
  • 1979 Cassis de Dijon Direct precedence of EU
    law
  • 1984 Von Colson National courts must interpret
    national law in conformity with EU law
  • 1991 FrancovichA member state is obliged to
    compensate persons for damage caused by a breach
    of EC law for which it is responsible

34
Careers
  • Vassilios Skouris, Born in 1948 .... Awarded,
    doctorate in constitutional and administrative
    law at Hamburg University (1973) Assistant
    Professor at Hamburg University (1972-77)
    Professor of Public Law at Bielefeld University
    (1978) Professor of Public Law at the University
    of Thessaloniki (1982) Minister of Internal
    Affairs (1989 and 1996) ..President of the Court
    of Justice since 7 October 2003.

35
Competing Model of Jurisprudence
36
Jurisdiction in the EU
37
Supranational Principal or Agent of the Member
States?
Source Garrett IO 1995
38
Source Garrett IO
39
The original rationalist argument
Garrett IO
40
Other member states as strategic players
41
(No Transcript)
42
(No Transcript)
43
(No Transcript)
44
(No Transcript)
45
The Brunell-Stone-Sweet Model
46
The Carruba-Model
47
The Discretion of the Court
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com