The Impact of Legislation and Regulation on the Freedom of Movement of Capital in Estonia, Poland and Latvia
Author(s): Graeme Baber (Author)
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Publication Date: 1 Jun. 2010
Edition: New edition
Language: English
Print length: 430 pages
ISBN-10: 1443821136
ISBN-13: 9781443821131
Book Description
One of the fundamental freedoms of the European Union’s Internal Market is the free movement of capital. National barriers to the cross-border movement of capital and payments are prohibited, not only between Member States of the Union, but also between these States and third countries. The book investigates to what extent Estonia, Poland and Latvia have implemented laws that comply with this principle. It compares and contrasts the similarities and differences between these three Member States in how their legislation and regulations affect such free movement. The research investigates whether there is an association between the national legal restrictions to the free movement of capital and cross-border capital flows to and from Estonia, Poland and Latvia. It reports the views of executives in the business sectors most affected by these restrictions as to the importance of the free movement of capital to their companies, as to whether the European Union’s regulatory framework supports the free movement of services and the freedom of establishment, and as to whether the national law limits these freedoms.
Editorial Reviews
Review
The free movement of capital is by now a familiar element of European Union law. Dr. Baber’s book, however, conducts a very thorough analysis of the extent to which the legal and regulatory framework, in three of the Member States which acceded to the EU in 2004, actually complies with this principle and exposes some key weaknesses. Unusually for a book on law and regulation, the work includes a model more often found in the finance or economics literature to examine the actual effect that the compliance or otherwise has in practice on capital flows. That Dr. Baber’s book brings together consideration of Polish, Estonian and Latvian measures in one work will make it possibly a unique contribution and indeed one which I myself would find highly useful to refer to for my own work, both teaching and research. –Richard Alexander, Lecturer in Financial Law, Centre for Financial and Management Studies, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London
Dr. Baber’s manuscript conducts a thorough analysis of the extent to which the legal and regulatory framework of European Union law which sanctions free movement of capital, in three of the Member States which acceded to the EU in 2004, actually complies with the principle of free movement of capital. This analysis leads to the exposure of a number of key weaknesses in term of compliance in these three countries. While there is emerging literature in English examining certain limited aspects of law and regulation in Poland, the coverage of its counterparts in the Baltic states is in short supply. A comprehensive consideration and comparative analysis of Polish, Estonian and Latvian measures in financial law and regulation make this book possibly unique in the literature and in the market. –Laixiang Sun, Professor and Head of Department, Centre for Financial and Management Studies, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London
About the Author
Graeme Baber is an LLM Lecturer at BPP Law School, specialising in UK and International Financial and Corporate Law. He is qualified in both law and economics, with a Doctor of Philosophy degree from the School of Oriental and African Studies. He has written works on the taxation of corporate debt, thin capitalisation, and computer sciences. His is interested in music, especially of the baroque period; he is also a church organist, and an amateur singer, instrumentalist and classical composer.