Progress in European market integration over the past two decades has come at the expense of growing flexibility, or differentiation, in the laws that govern the Single Market (SM) as well as the way that these laws are implemented. This volume examines how the completion of the SM has been held back in the varied implementation of European Union competition policy, variation in national policies on services, corporate law, telecommunications, energy, taxation, and gambling, and the EU’s uneven transportation network.
Experience keywords
Economic Development; World Economy; International Economic Institutions: United Nations, OECD, European Union Public policy; Industrial and technology policy; Employment Policy; Latin America Development; Public Services, Public Enterprises, Foreign Direct Investment