Existe-t-il des limites juridiques à la privatisation des entreprises publiques ?
Nicolas Thirion
The world-wide privatization movement raises the question whether there are any
definite limits to privatizing public enterprise. The question is examined from a
strictly legal point of view in a perspective of comparative law covering the United
Kingdom as the most advanced privatising State, France and Italy, which both
traditionally have a rather strong public sector. A first part of the examination is
devoted to an account of the actual state of substantive (rather than formal)
privatization in these countries, and to the legal instruments used or required to
accomplish it. Following a distinction between privatization of public enterprises
acting in the industrial or commercial sector, either simply as state-owned private
enterprises or as enterprises vested with a specific public utility mission, and other
enterprises more directly linked to the exercise of public authority, it is, first, noted
that substantive privatization may be subject to a number of requirements of form and
procedure, such as a requirement of privatization by statutory instrument where the
enterprise has been established as a public enterprise by statute in the first place, but
that in none of the hypothesis there are limits of substantive law definitely inhibiting
the realization of the political will to privatize parts or sectors of the public
enterprise. This holds true not only for enterprises acting in the industrial or
commercial sector, but also for activities directly ancillary to the exercise of public
authority, such as the establishment and operation of State prisons, and for the very
accomplishment of tasks of public administration, since, as the example of the UK
shows, many of these activities of State administration may be contracted out so that,
as a result, the State retains no more than a role of coordination and control.
In a second part the examination is extended to possible future privatization
developments as in France and Italy the movement has not yet gone as far as in the
United Kingdom. Based again on a distinction between public enterprises acting in
the industrial and commercial sector, and other parts of the State’s economic
activities in the public interest, the examination is first carried to an analysis of
whether under French law, public services of a national character as well as true de
facto monopolies may be privatized, and again the answer is yes, provided that
privatization results in or is preceded by a reduction of the national scope of the
public service or by a dissolution of the monopoly. Likewise, under Italian law, there
would ultimately be no definite legal obstacle to privatize “essentially public
services” other than obstacles of form and procedure. However, the legal issues now
are of a constitutional nature, and they are even more so when it comes to privatising
other elements of genuine State authority. There is, indeed, a controversy whether
there is a hard core of “constitutionally” established or even preestablished public
service, which, as a matter of constitutional law or even of “supra-constitutional”
law may not be subject to privatization and its economic rationale. However, as the
pouvoir constituant may not be limited in its action by the pouvoir constitué, the
author again concludes that, as a matter merely of law, there is no legal limit to the
political will to privatization, if there is such will on a sufficiently broad basis.
Whether such political will is socially desirable and justifiable as a matter of
institutional economics is not the subject of the examination.
• 1 Introduction
• 2 L’état actuel des politiques de privatisation d'entreprises publiques
— 2.1 La privatisation des entreprises appartenant
au secteur public industriel et commercial
— 2.2 La privatisation des autres composantes
du secteur public économique
— 2.3 Résumé
• 3 La poursuite des privatisations d'entreprises publiques en France et en Italie : essai de prospective
— 3.1 La privatisation des organismes gestionnaires de SPIC
— 3.2 La privatisation des autres composantes
du secteur public économique
• 4 Conclusion