State Aid Law Blog

State Aid Uncovered Blog

In Lexxion’s State Aid Uncovered blog, Prof. Phedon Nicolaides publishes weekly critical analyses of recent State aid judgments and decisions. Each post presents the key points of a court judgment or EU Commission decision, places it in the context of similar case law or practice, assesses the underlying reasoning and highlights any inconsistencies or contradictions.

Guest contributions from other State aid experts will also be published on the blog at irregular intervals to complement the content of the blog posts.

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- games of chance ×

Regulatory Acts such as the Granting of Betting Rights May Not Constitute State Aid

Introduction Regulatory acts that confer a selective advantage without involving any transfer of state resources do not constitute State Aid. As is well established in the case law, Member States do not need to maximise revenue from granting licences, permits or authorisations when they act as regulators. Such licences, permits or authorisations may even be granted for free. Therefore, when […]

The State Acting as a Regulator

When the state acts as a regulator, it does not have to charge a licence fee that maximises its revenue. Introduction Governments can influence the allocation of resources with at least three instruments: subsidisation, taxation and regulation. All three may contain State aid; if subsidies are selective, if taxes allow for exemptions and if regulation involves charges which are not […]

- games of chance ×

Regulatory Acts such as the Granting of Betting Rights May Not Constitute State Aid

Introduction Regulatory acts that confer a selective advantage without involving any transfer of state resources do not constitute State Aid. As is well established in the case law, Member States do not need to maximise revenue from granting licences, permits or authorisations when they act as regulators. Such licences, permits or authorisations may even be granted for free. Therefore, when […]

The State Acting as a Regulator

When the state acts as a regulator, it does not have to charge a licence fee that maximises its revenue. Introduction Governments can influence the allocation of resources with at least three instruments: subsidisation, taxation and regulation. All three may contain State aid; if subsidies are selective, if taxes allow for exemptions and if regulation involves charges which are not […]

- games of chance ×

Regulatory Acts such as the Granting of Betting Rights May Not Constitute State Aid

Introduction Regulatory acts that confer a selective advantage without involving any transfer of state resources do not constitute State Aid. As is well established in the case law, Member States do not need to maximise revenue from granting licences, permits or authorisations when they act as regulators. Such licences, permits or authorisations may even be granted for free. Therefore, when […]

The State Acting as a Regulator

When the state acts as a regulator, it does not have to charge a licence fee that maximises its revenue. Introduction Governments can influence the allocation of resources with at least three instruments: subsidisation, taxation and regulation. All three may contain State aid; if subsidies are selective, if taxes allow for exemptions and if regulation involves charges which are not […]

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