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7 - The Environment, Sustainability Goals and the Climate Crisis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 August 2022

Bruce Wardhaugh
Affiliation:
University of Durham
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Summary

State aid took on significance during and in the immediate aftermath of the Brexit referendum’s campaign. This chapter argues that this was a result of campaigners’ misunderstandings regarding the nature of the EU’s state aid regime. The second section considers the two agreements that define the future UK–EU relationship: the withdrawal agreement and a EU–UK Trade and Cooperation Agreement governing the parties’ post-Brexit relationship. It discusses the implications of these agreements for the post-Brexit competition regime. The third section suggests what the UK’s competition provisions might look like post-Brexit. The analysis shows that there is little that has or can be gained through this new regime. The fourth section considers the subsidy provisions which are contained in the agreements between the EU and UK. These provisions give the government greater scope to subsidise firms, industries and regions in the name of industrial policy and regional equity. The chapter is sceptical about the utility of the anticipated post-Brexit industrial policy and competition regime. It appears that the new regime will incorporate many elements against which we have cautioned against in this work.

Type
Chapter
Information
Competition Law in Crisis
The Antitrust Response to Economic Shocks
, pp. 195 - 232
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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