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Background. Agenda of the European Commission to promote reform and modernisation of restrictive regulation in the professional services areaIHS Vienna Study on regulation in various professional sectors (2003)Commission Report COM 83(2004) and Communication of 5 September 2005World Bank Report
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1. Preliminary Findings from the Study on Conveyancing Services Regulation in Europe Centre of European Law and Politics, University of Bremen (ZERP): Christoph U. Schmid (Project Co-ordinator)
International Real Estate Business School, University of Regensburg: Gabriel S. Lee and Steffen Sebastian
Institute for Advanced Studies Vienna (IHS): Marcel Fink and Iain Paterson
2. Background Agenda of the European Commission to promote reform and modernisation of restrictive regulation in the professional services area
IHS Vienna Study on regulation in various professional sectors (2003)
Commission Report COM 83(2004) and Communication of 5 September 2005
World Bank Report Doing Business(2005) outlining wide discrepancies in costs and time to register property transfers
3. Aims (1) Analysis of one key market and the impact of professional services regulation on it
Conveyancing chosen on account of its high significance for the economy
Study awarded to ZERP in August 2006, to be concluded at the beginning of 2007
4. Aims (2)
Analyse the relationship between the level of regulation and market outcomes in conveyancing services:
1. Level of regulation : compute a regulatory index on regulation governing:
market entry
market conduct
mandatory intervention
consumer protection
2. Market outcomes: price, quality of services, choice for consumers and speed of the transaction
5. Methodology
Questionnaire on basic legal and economic aspects of conveyancing, answered by 20 national reporters (SE, FI, DK, DE, FR, UK, Scotland, IE, LU, BE, NL, ES, PT, SI, SL, CZ, HU, PO, A, IT)
Web-based survey on market outcomes: price, quality, choice, speed of services
Case studies on the reforms in the UK and the Netherlands, on Germany and Sweden
Input from professional associations and national competition authorities and questionnaire addressees
6. Basic legal findings Basic orientation: focus on legal professionals, as regulated strongest
Four regulatory models:
traditional Latin notary system (ES, PT, FR, BE, LU, DE, A, PO, IT, SL, SI)
deregulated Dutch notary system (NL)
lawyer system (UK, IE, Scotland, HU, CZ)
Nordic licensed agent system (DK, SE, FI)
7. The Latin Notary System (1) One neutral professional enjoys exclusive rights and needs to be involved on a mandatory basis
Different degree of involvement:
Mandatory for sales contract (PO, DE) or property transfer (NL, ES)
Mandatory for the registration only (FR, BE, IT, LU, PT)
Mandatory certification of signatures only (SL; SI; A; CZ [also lawyer])
8. The Latin Notary System (2) highly regulated:
numerus clausus
fixed fees
fixed location
strong limitations on:
interprofessional cooperation,
business structure,
advertising
9. The Latin Notary System (3) Exceptions:
Austria:
no mandatory involvement of any professional, but notary/lawyer have exclusive rights
fees not fixed, but high in practice
CZ and HU: lawyer or notary
Italy: liberalisation of fees in 2006
consequences not yet clear
Greece: hybrid model: notary + 2 lawyers
most expensive system
10. The Deregulated Dutch Notary System (1) Reform of 1999:
numerus clausus abolished
only business plan to be presented by applicant
fees completely liberalized
freedom of establishment enlarged
11. The Deregulated Dutch Notary System (2) Consequences:
Relatively strong competiton among notaries
Number of professionals increased by ca. 30% since 1995
Fees for conveyancing decreased whereas fees for other notarial services (e.g. family law, wills) increased
Concerns over integrity and quality of advice frequently voiced, but no major problems reported
12. The Lawyer System Adversarial model (British Isles):
both parties have their own lawyer
vs. notarial lawyer system (HU, CZ, A): one lawyer may act for both parties
Low degree of regulation: no numerus clausus, liberalised fees (often flat fees)
Reform of 1987 admitted licensed conveyancers as competing service providers
Consequence: only small number exists, but solicitors fees decreased
13. The Scandinavian Licensed Estate Agent System Licensed real estate agents provide also legal services
Low degree of regulation
no numerus clausus, negotiable fees
few problems due to frequent use of standard contracts
Peculiarities
DK: buyer usually represented by a lawyer
FI: authentication of signatures by notary mandatory
Best performance lowest legal costs of all systems