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Portrait of Jörgen Hettne. Photo.

Jörgen Hettne

Professor, Head of the Department of Business Law

Portrait of Jörgen Hettne. Photo.

European industrial policy and state aid – a competence mismatch?

Author

  • Jörgen Hettne

Summary, in English

The European Union (EU) has been entrusted with rather weak powers as regards industrial policy. On top of this, its Member States are prevented from pursuing a national industrial policy with monetary elements as this may distort competition within the EU internal market. At the same time, European companies compete in the global market with state-supported companies from other economically strong regions of the world, including China, Japan and the US. The EU’s current successful internal market paradigm, with its state aid prohibition, could therefore become an obstacle internationally. This analysis argues that the EU presently suffers from a competence mismatch – the absence of a coherent European industrial policy – which risks making European companies weak globally. The EU would benefit from an industrial policy which is adaptive to geopolitical changes in the world, such as the Chinese Belt and Road Initiative and the present US mercantilist approach to trade policy as well as Brexit. A more aggressive European industrial policy might be needed at times when the rule-based international trade system is not working. If there is no global level playing field, trade strategies have to adapt to new realities.

Department/s

  • Department of Business Law
  • Lund University Centre for Business Law (Swedish abbr: ACLU)

Publishing year

2020

Language

English

Publication/Series

Europapolitisk analys

Issue

1

Document type

Report

Publisher

Svenska institutet för europapolitiska studier

Topic

  • Law (excluding Law and Society)

Status

Published

Report number

2020

Research group

  • Lund University Centre for Business Law (Swedish abbr: ACLU)