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Rules concerning third countries’ reciprocal access to EU public procurement - SME related impacts, thresholds and national legislation
Swansea University Author: Pedro Telles
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Abstract
Direct benefits for SMEs from the proposed Regulation look limited at best, while indirect impacts appear probable. The 5 Mio EUR proposed for the threshold is similar to pre-existing public procurement thresholds and implies that only a small subset of contracts will be covered by the regulation wh...
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Brussels
European Parliament
2013
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa25445 |
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2019-08-06T13:12:27.1539041 v2 25445 2016-01-07 Rules concerning third countries’ reciprocal access to EU public procurement - SME related impacts, thresholds and national legislation cbb9f02a4820888c1b6c3ce352009a0b 0000-0002-0666-6351 Pedro Telles Pedro Telles true false 2016-01-07 LAWD Direct benefits for SMEs from the proposed Regulation look limited at best, while indirect impacts appear probable. The 5 Mio EUR proposed for the threshold is similar to pre-existing public procurement thresholds and implies that only a small subset of contracts will be covered by the regulation which may impact its effectiveness. Contracting authorities have no incentive to refer procedures to the Commission. Spain has reciprocity clauses but there is no evidence of their widespread use. ResearchReportExternalBody European Parliament Brussels 31 8 2013 2013-08-31 This study has been written by Dr. Pedro Telles of Bangor University at the request of the Impact Assessment Unit of the Directorate for Impact Assessment and European Added Value, within the Directorate General for Internal Policies (DG IPOL) of the General Secretariat of the European Parliament, following a request of the Committee on International Trade (INTA) COLLEGE NANME Law COLLEGE CODE LAWD Swansea University 2019-08-06T13:12:27.1539041 2016-01-07T12:11:24.3072436 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences Hilary Rodham Clinton School of Law Pedro Telles 0000-0002-0666-6351 1 0025445-07012016122917.pdf AnnexIIITelles.pdf 2016-01-07T12:29:17.7700000 Output 241346 application/pdf Proof true 2016-01-07T12:29:17.0000000 false |
title |
Rules concerning third countries’ reciprocal access to EU public procurement - SME related impacts, thresholds and national legislation |
spellingShingle |
Rules concerning third countries’ reciprocal access to EU public procurement - SME related impacts, thresholds and national legislation Pedro Telles |
title_short |
Rules concerning third countries’ reciprocal access to EU public procurement - SME related impacts, thresholds and national legislation |
title_full |
Rules concerning third countries’ reciprocal access to EU public procurement - SME related impacts, thresholds and national legislation |
title_fullStr |
Rules concerning third countries’ reciprocal access to EU public procurement - SME related impacts, thresholds and national legislation |
title_full_unstemmed |
Rules concerning third countries’ reciprocal access to EU public procurement - SME related impacts, thresholds and national legislation |
title_sort |
Rules concerning third countries’ reciprocal access to EU public procurement - SME related impacts, thresholds and national legislation |
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cbb9f02a4820888c1b6c3ce352009a0b |
author_id_fullname_str_mv |
cbb9f02a4820888c1b6c3ce352009a0b_***_Pedro Telles |
author |
Pedro Telles |
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Pedro Telles |
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ResearchReportExternalBody |
publishDate |
2013 |
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Swansea University |
publisher |
European Parliament |
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Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences |
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Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences |
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facultyofhumanitiesandsocialsciences |
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Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences |
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Hilary Rodham Clinton School of Law{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences{{{_:::_}}}Hilary Rodham Clinton School of Law |
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description |
Direct benefits for SMEs from the proposed Regulation look limited at best, while indirect impacts appear probable. The 5 Mio EUR proposed for the threshold is similar to pre-existing public procurement thresholds and implies that only a small subset of contracts will be covered by the regulation which may impact its effectiveness. Contracting authorities have no incentive to refer procedures to the Commission. Spain has reciprocity clauses but there is no evidence of their widespread use. |
published_date |
2013-08-31T03:30:25Z |
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score |
11.036006 |