2012
DOI: 10.5296/jmr.v4i3.1619
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The Regulatory State: How Democratic?

Abstract: The principle of subsidiarity was formally introduced as a principle of intention in the 1991 Treaty of Maastricht that recognized the devolution of competence, i.e., 'decision-making to be performed at the lowest possible effective administrative level' in the European multi-level system of governance. The rhetoric deployed on behalf of the principle of subsidiarity elaborated it and strongly suggested that it was, as it were, a principle of 'nearness' to the people, implying a more bottom-up form of governan… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(1 citation statement)
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“…Greater reliance on market-based mechanisms, reduced state-ownership, and rising private financing [ 119 ] imply more – not less – government regulations (e.g., regarding the pricing of health services, establishment of care providers) to manage hospital competition, as in the Anglo-Saxon model [ 120 ]. This theory of an active regulatory welfare state [ 5 , 121 ], which is “ not based on the extension of the public sphere, but on the reduction of the autonomy of non-state actors ”, relies on standards (DRGs, GPs pay-for-performance schemes) and regulations of new entrants, for instance private operators, to govern ‘at a distance’ [ 122 , 123 ]. Despite these advances, major public issues remain unresolved.…”
Section: Commentarymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Greater reliance on market-based mechanisms, reduced state-ownership, and rising private financing [ 119 ] imply more – not less – government regulations (e.g., regarding the pricing of health services, establishment of care providers) to manage hospital competition, as in the Anglo-Saxon model [ 120 ]. This theory of an active regulatory welfare state [ 5 , 121 ], which is “ not based on the extension of the public sphere, but on the reduction of the autonomy of non-state actors ”, relies on standards (DRGs, GPs pay-for-performance schemes) and regulations of new entrants, for instance private operators, to govern ‘at a distance’ [ 122 , 123 ]. Despite these advances, major public issues remain unresolved.…”
Section: Commentarymentioning
confidence: 99%