IqNetA logo
UnEPRC
  • About
    Back

    About

    • What is IQ-Net
    • Members
    • People
    • 20th Anniversary of IQ-Net
  • Knowledge exchange
    Back

    Knowledge exchange

    • Research Papers
    • Research Papers
    • Good practice case studies
  • News & events
    Back

    News & events

    • News archive
    • IQ-Net Bulletins

    Conference ‘Regional policy in Scotland after Brexit’ – 7 February 2020,

    The 47th IQ-Net conference (Delft): Preparing for 2021-27 - Programming,

    TRACER: Research and Innovation project meeting on coal regions in transition

  • Contact us
  • Partner pages
  • Login
Login
  • Home
  • News & events
  • News archive
  • News archive
  • New EPRC research paper: Regional State aid control at 60

New EPRC research paper: Regional State aid control at 60

11 January 2018

Is State aid control of Cohesion policy now more challenging than control of domestic regional aid?

A new research paper by Fiona Wishlade looks back on 60 years of competition policy control of regional aid.

Competition policy and regional aid relations date back to 1957 and were embedded in the Treaty of Rome from the outset. However, regional aid control has been shaped by changing theorires of competitive harm, enlargement and the emergence of a bespoke European regional policy under the Structural Funds. Every dimension of regional aid has been addressed under competition policy control - maps, aid instensities, areas designation systems, large firms and large aid awards - and every EEA country has been affected.

Drawing on EPRC research conducted under the European Regional Policy Research Consortium (EoRPA), this new paper reflects on the evolution of competition policy control of regional aid over several decades and successive enlargements. It argues that the most challenging areas of State aid and regional development relations now concern Cohesion policy, rahter than domestic regional aid. This results from the broadening concept of State aid, the increasingly diversive nature of Cohesion policy instruments and the perceived implications of audit for Managing Authorities.

The research paper ‘State aid control of regional development policyat 60: harder, sharper, but not yet crystal clear'’ is published in EPRC’s European Policy Research Paper series.

×
Share this article
  • Home
  • About IQ-Net
  • Research papers
  • News & events
  • Contact us
  • Login
  • Terms & conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Ethics & sustainability
  • Site map
  • Twitter

European Policies Research Centre Delft

BG West 270
Julianalaan 134
2628 BL Delft
Netherlands

info@eprcdelft.eu

© 2020 European Policies Research Centre