Abstract

The European Community is well advanced in its legislative programme for public procurement, which should, by the end of 1992, generally extend the application of common ground rules to what is potentially tradeable across national frontiers. The utilities Directive and the current proposal for remedies in the utilities sectors contain a number of innovations. These are designed to adapt Community rules to the opportunities and realities of the procurement market, not simply to the requirements of the theology of competition. Other developments outside the legislative programme augur well for the building up of a better functioning European public procurement market.

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