Inter-institutional dynamics in the cross-border provision of healthcare services

This paper analyses the EU cross-border provision of healthcare services. It shows the interplay between the Commission and the Court concerning welfare regulation in the EU. The paper concludes that law and evidence-based policy-making serve as powerful resources for the Commission in managing conflict.

ARENA Working Paper 05/2009 (pdf)

Dorte Sindbjerg Martinsen

Welfare regulation in the European Union (EU) continues to crawl forward despite salient conflicts of interests. This paper addresses the fundamental puzzle of how regulatory competences may expand into the core of the welfare state and how conflicts are, eventually, managed in such processes. It analyses the EU cross-border provision of healthcare services. It is argued that the interplay between the Commission and the Court constitutes a powerful dynamic in generating new regulatory activities and in finding ways to set conflicts aside. The Commission draws on formulations offered by the Court in finding ways to manage conflict, for example by requiring ‘proportionate’ national policies which establish that national obstacles to free movement principles are ‘objectively necessary’. The paper concludes that law and evidence-based policy-making serve as powerful resources for the Commission in managing conflict.

Tags: ECJ, European Commission, European Court of Justice, regulation, welfare state, regulatory politics
Published Nov. 9, 2010 10:52 AM