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Improving EU Institutional Design for the Digital Age
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#Tech, Media, Telecom

Improving EU Institutional Design to Better Supervise Digital Platforms

  • January 17, 2022
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Report | Improving EU Institutional Design to Better Supervise Digital Platforms

As it currently stands, an increasing number of EU laws overlap and simultaneously apply to the provision of a specific digital service, but they rely on different institutional frameworks for implementation. However, it is key that these institutional frameworks are coherent and that the authorities in charge of the different EU laws cooperate with each other.

To contribute to such a debate on effective enforcement, which is particularly important today as EU lawmakers are discussing the institutional framework for the Digital Markets Act (DMA) and Digital Services Act (DSA), CERRE releases the report ‘Improving EU Institutional Design to Better Supervise Digital Platforms’.

Authored by leading academics Giorgio Monti and Alexandre de Streel, this study takes stock of existing institutional models, evaluates each model by studying its effectiveness and consistency, and recommends improvements to the overall system to ensure more enforcement coherence and effectiveness of EU Platform Laws. It also includes several case studies of cross-countries and cross-legal regime cooperation.

Recommendations

The authors draw three main conclusions from their study:

Firstly, Europe needs a close cooperation between the different national authorities when it regulates digital services, which are often offered cross-border. A great example of success here is the Consumer Protection Cooperation (CPC) Network that took several coordinated actions against cross-borders platforms to enhance the protection of EU consumers. It has proven to be a very successful model demonstrating that a well-coordinated network can produce consistent EU-wide remedies, without the need for a single, supra-national agency.

Secondly, Europe needs better coordination between regulators in charge of different legal regimes, for example the data protection regulator cooperating with competition authority. This has huge potential to improve the quality and consistency of regulatory intervention but different agencies need to learn how to talk to each other and understand better different regulatory cultures. The authors identify the UK’s Digital Regulatory Cooperation Forum (DRCF) as a great example of cross-regime coordination for online regulatory matters, helping to understanding where connections need to be made as a result of overlapping regulation.

“Cooperation and coordination among national regulators is key to successful regulation in the EU. Not only does cooperation help identify best practices and share knowledge, it can also stimulate better targeted and more coherent enforcement” Giorgio Monti.

Finally, centralising enforcement at the EU level could be useful for the largest cross-borders platforms. Such centralisation could take place at the European Commission as proposed in the DMA and DSA, or in a new (to be created) European Platforms Authority. However, this model could only be effective with the strong cooperation and support of national authorities who are closer to the field. Banking Union is a great example of this: the European Central Bank has centralised decision making but enforcement is greatly supported by national authorities to ensure compliance.

“When we look at the future enforcement of the DMA and DSA, it is pragmatic that some  enforcement tasks sit with the European Commission as it will take time and resources to develop a new authority. But, in the long-term, a separate authority would be better to guarantee the independence of the oversight and enforcement” Alexandre de Streel.

Join us on Monday 17 January at 12:30 CET for an open discussion on the effective enforcement and improvement of institutional design, followed by a discussion with representatives from industry, regulatory bodies, and the European Commission.

Author(s)
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Giorgio Monti
Giorgio Monti
CERRE Research Fellow
Tilburg Law School

Giorgio Monti is a CERRE Research Fellow and Professor of Competition Law at Tilburg Law School.

He began his career in the UK (Leicester 1993-2001 and London School of Economics (2001-2010) before taking up the Chair in competition law at the European University Institute in Florence, Italy (2010-2019). While at the EUI he helped establish the Florence Competition Program which carries out research and training for judges and executives. He also served as Head of the Law Department at the EUI.

His principal field of research is competition law, a subject he enjoys tackling from an economic and a policy perspective.

Together with Damian Chalmers and Gareth Davies he is a co-author of European Union Law: Text and Materials (4th ed, Cambridge University Press, 2019), one of the major texts on the subject. He is one of the editors of the Common Market Law Review.

Alexandre De Streel
Alexandre de Streel
CERRE Academic Director
University of Namur

Alexandre de Streel is the Academic Director of the digital research programme at CERRE and Professor of European law at the University of Namur where he chairs the Namur Digital Institute (NADI). Alexandre is also visiting professor at the College of Europe (Bruges) and SciencesPo Paris. Besides, he chairs the expert group on the online platform economy advising the European Commission and is a part-time judge at the Belgian Competition Authority.

His main areas of research are regulation and competition policy in the digital economy as well as the legal issues raised by the developments of artificial intelligence.

Previously, Alexandre held visiting positions at New York University Law School, European University Institute in Florence, Barcelona Graduate School of Economics and University of Louvain. He also worked for the Belgian Deputy Prime Minister, the Belgian Permanent Representation to the European Union and the European Commission.

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