What Shapes National Responses to EU Public Procurement Policy? The Case of Health and Social Services in Norway, Germany and England

Authors

  • Signe Bock Segaard Institute for Social Research, Oslo, Norway
  • Nadia Brookes Personal Social Services Research Unit, University of Kent, England
  • Joachim Benedikt Pahl Institute of Political Science, the University of Muenster, Germany

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.58235/sjpa.v24i1.8623

Keywords:

public procurement, health and social service provision, policy advocacy, political system, interest groups

Abstract

This article investigates responses to EU public procurement directives in Norway, England and Germany, with a particular focus on health and social services. We used a comparative national patterns approach to analyse parliamentary debates, consultative statements, the media and interviews with stakeholders.

The literature contains prominent arguments suggesting that health and social service governance regimes are converging on the liberal model. Some authors argue that with its focus on policies which create markets, the EU is a driving force with an increasing relevance for market-based governance practices. However, the role of EU legislation is unclear as procurement regimes in relation to the governance of health and social services constitute a highly ambiguous terrain. Our study enabled us to show that the form of the debate is highly dependent on path-dependent mechanisms and the degree of openness of the national political system that provides channels for interests to be articulated. Indeed, the Norwegian case study serves as an excellent example of why marketisation has not advanced to the degree predicted in the literature: an inclusive and open political system and a strong non-profit health and service sector meant that the non-profit groups managed to turn the debate in their favour.

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Author Biographies

Signe Bock Segaard, Institute for Social Research, Oslo, Norway

Signe Bock Segaard (PhD) is a Senior Research Fellow at the Institute for Social Research in Oslo, Norway. Her main research interests include public administration and politics, welfare politics, and third sector as well as local democracy, elections and gender representation. Recently she has published on national policies and legal frameworks for private providers of education and elderly care in Scandinavia.

Nadia Brookes, Personal Social Services Research Unit, University of Kent, England

Nadia Brookes is a Senior Research Fellow at the Personal Social Services Research Unit (PSSRU) at the University of Kent and Fellow of the National Institute for Health Research School of Social Care Research. She specialises in social care and health, innovation and service delivery across sectors. Before joining the university, Nadia held senior research roles in central and local government, the non-profit sector and National Health Service.

Joachim Benedikt Pahl, Institute of Political Science, the University of Muenster, Germany

Joachim Benedikt Pahl studied Public Administration and Political Sciences (B.A.) at the University of Konstanz and Social Policy Research (M.A.) at the University of Bremen. After having worked as a consultant in one of the major German non-profit welfare organisations, he joined the Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität (WWU) in Münster as a research associate studying the development of non-profit organisations in light of changing environment conditions.

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Published

2020-03-15

How to Cite

Bock Segaard, S., Brookes, N., & Benedikt Pahl, J. (2020). What Shapes National Responses to EU Public Procurement Policy? The Case of Health and Social Services in Norway, Germany and England. Scandinavian Journal of Public Administration, 24(1), 25–48. https://doi.org/10.58235/sjpa.v24i1.8623

Issue

Section

Original Articles

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