EU
Services Directive threat to housing
May 9, 2005 16:30 | by
Kartika Liotard, MEP
Similar to the housing associations found in some parts of the
UK, Dutch housing corporations, although privatised just over a decade
ago, are non-profit foundations obliged to meet a number of exacting
statutory obligations. Vital to the provision of affordable housing
in the Netherlands, they are now under fire from the European Commission.
Kartika Liotard, Member of the European Parliament for the Dutch Socialist
Party (SP), explains.
Dutch non-profit housing corporations are deeply concerned over criticisms
by the European Commission of their interpretation of the duty to
put contracts above a certain size out to tender across the whole
of the EU. What provoked this disquiet was a tender issued by a housing
corporation in Vathorst, a new estate at Amersfoort, a pleasant town
in the cenrtre of the country, not far from Utrecht. Because housing
corporations, under legislation governing the sector, can still (despite
being privately owned) be defined as public bodies, they are obliged
to fulfil the conditions laid down in the EU's compulsory tender laws.
These require any public authority or organisation belonging to such
to put any project over a certain size out to tender across all twenty-five
member states. The Commission sees public-private partnerships as
state-run bodies and believes therefore that they fall within the
scope of this European tender system.
What the Commission - or possibly in the end the European Court -
is going to do about this is not clear. What is obvious, however,
is that co-operation between local authorities and housing corporations
now faces an even greater threat: the EU Services Directive. Paragraph
6 of Article 14 of Bolkestein's proposed measure forbids ""the
direct or indirect involvement of competing operators, in the granting
of authorisations or other decisions of the competent authorities".
This is a far-reaching interdiction. Every agreement between a local
housing corporation and a local authority must, according to the Services
Directive, be viewed as, by its very nature, an impermissible form
of interference with competition, because service providers from other
countries can have no possibility of making such an accord. Any such
arrangement must, according to the Commission, discriminate against
foreign firms - and indeed it must.
But local authorities and corporations need each other, being together
responsible for a major part of building production and social housing
in my own country and elsewhere. It is common for a corporation to
be given permission to develop an area in return for certain undertakings
to the local authority in relation to the sort of housing the authority
wishes to see. Social housing agreements between local authorities
and corporations rely to a large extent on mutual advantage. The EU
Services Directive would put an end to this form of cooperation. Corporations
and similar bodies in other member states would be forced increasingly
to present themselves as 'ordinary' property developers. According
to 'Bolkestein' that would be a good thing, because they could then
tender for work in any member state of the Union. It is open to question,
however, whether a local non-profit housing corporation from, say,
Amersfoort would really have much interest in building flats in Prague
or Zagreb. Even if one might wish it success in such a venture, this
would not alter the fact that the local authority would be left empty-handed,
forced to rely entirely on the 'free market' for all of its social
housing needs.
Kartika Liotard represents the Dutch Socialist Party in the European
Parliament. The SP is the Dutch delegation affiliated to the United
Left Group (GUE/NGL) of 41 MEPs.
This article is translated from a piece which appeared in the Dutch
national newspaper NRC Handelsblad on 19th April, 2005
See also http://www.spectrezine.org/Editorial/servicesdirective.htm
http://www.spectrezine.org/europe/Fritz-vs-Bolkestein-EN.pdf
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