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European Public Procurement: Legislative History of the Classic Directive 2004/18/EC

J.M. Hebly
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TLDR
The European Parliament and the Council on the Coordination of Procedures for the Award of Public Works Contracts, Public Supply Contracts, and Public Service Contracts as discussed by the authors proposed a new legal framework for public procurement in the European Union.
Abstract
Fourteen percent of the European Union's gross domestic product is accounted for by government or public utility works, supply, and service contracts. Yet, in spite of its major importance for the European economy, public procurement remained for a long time one of the areas which benefited least from the creation of the internal market. Awarding contracts across borders was fraught with complicated provisions and rigid, protracted, bureaucratic procedures. Furthermore, the possibility of mainstreaming social and environmental interests in procurement practice seemed remote. In 1996, the Commission proposed amendments to the existing legal framework, prompted by the emergence of the information society, the gradual withdrawal of the State from certain economic activities, and increased budgetary austerity. The ultimate result, after many years of gestation, was Directive 2004/18 of the European Parliament and the Council on the Coordination of Procedures for the Award of Public Works Contracts, Public Supply Contracts and Public Service Contracts. This book gathers into a single source all the legislative documents preceding the coming into effect of this important directive. In great detail it clearly reveals the negotiation and compromise over the realisation of the legislative objectives - modernisation, simplification, and flexibility - in addition to such crucial elements and outcomes of the debate as the following: the introduction of electronic purchasing mechanisms; provisions to avoid conferring advantage on any economic operator or giving preference to any national production; the development of the "negotiated procedure" and the "framework agreement"; environmental impact requirements; provisions for small and medium-size undertakings (SMUs); social and employment policy; compliance and review procedures; protective measures against certain products; and combating corruption and organised crime. The book first presents documents that outline the reasons that led to the intention to integrate public works (93/37/EEC), supply contracts (93/36/EEC), and service contracts (92/50/EEC) into one new directive. Then follow documents that detail the drafting of the recitals in the Preamble, the articles and the annexes. Finally, a list of legislative documents offers as complete an overview as possible of every item that played a role in the creation of Directive 2004/18/EC, including several amendments that have been made to the directive since it came into effect. This unique publication will be a powerful resource for lawyers and policymakers engaged in the development of European procurement law. It will also provide both practitioners and researchers working in the area of European procurement law with an incomparable desktop reference on Directive 2004/18/EC.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Towards better customized service‐led contracts through the competitive dialogue procedure

TL;DR: In this paper, a case study of a large infrastructural project procured through the CD procedure has been conducted to find an answer to this question, concluding that the dialogue offered by the competitive dialogue procedure in the Dutch Second Coen Tunnel project helped to align the complex demands with the several available solutions without harming the confidentiality principle or stimulating cherry picking.
DissertationDOI

The competitive dialogue procedure: negotiations and commitment in inter-organisational construction projects

M.E.L. Hoezen
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors address the question how inter-organisational negotiations and commitments are interrelated, and what the effect is of using the competitive dialogue procedure, and propose several measures to realize a more effective use of the Competitive Dialogue procedure.
Posted Content

Auctions vs. Negotiations: The Effects of Inefficient Renegotiation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that for the procurement of complex goods, the early exchange of information is important to avoid costly renegotiation ex post, and that this is achieved by bilateral negotiations but not by auctions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Formal and informal contracting processes in the competitive dialogue procedure: a multiple case-study (on-line)

TL;DR: In this article, it is shown that both the negotiations and the commitment stages consist of a formal part (formal bargaining/formal legal contract) and an informal part (informal sense-making/instructal psychological contract), and that these dynamically interact as problems of understanding are identified and resolved.
Book ChapterDOI

The WTO and the EU: Exploring the Relationship Between Public Procurement Regulatory Systems

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore the relationship between the most developed global public procurement regulation (GPA) adopted by the World Trade Organization and the EU procurement law advanced in almost 40 years.