editorial partner Liberte! Friedrich Naumann Foundation

regulation

Report: Removing Formal Obstacles from Labour Market
Economy
Report: Removing Formal Obstacles from Labour Market
More than 20 representatives of NGOs, Roma employment organizations, journalists, politicians, embassies’ representatives, among others, attended a seminar organized by INESS on December 15, 2015 devoted to describing the existing barriers on the labor market, which are the result of existing legislation and discuss possibilities of their removal, or change.
Further Regulation of Roaming Fees Bound to Increase Prices
Economy
Further Regulation of Roaming Fees Bound to Increase Prices
No-fee regulation will have its limits (they should prevent abusing of the cheap prices of cross-border calls), first proposals are very restrictive – the maximum 40 minutes of calls and 100 text messages per year from abroad. However, it is definitely one of the biggest intervention to the entrepreneurial freedom the European Union has seen.
Five Recommendations How to Regulate Gambling in the Czech Republic
Economy
Five Recommendations How to Regulate Gambling in the Czech Republic
The Centre for Economic and Market Analyses (CETA) found out the calculation of the social cost of gambling in the Czech Republic and the actual regulatory impact assessment (RIA) suffer from obvious shortcomings. Therefore, we decided to prepare five basic recommendations for the effective regulation of gambling in our country.
Nominate the Slovak Administrative Nonsense of 2015
Think Tank News
Nominate the Slovak Administrative Nonsense of 2015
The selection of administrative nonsenses listed every year gives a perfect overview of how many obstacles entrepreneurs must overcome if they want to run business in Slovakia. Feel free to nominate a nonsense that bothers you most – visit www.byrokratickynezmysel.sk and submit your suggestion until this Sunday.
Briefing Paper on the EU Agenda “Better Regulation for Better Results”
Policy Papers
Briefing Paper on the EU Agenda “Better Regulation for Better Results”
The objective of this paper is to comment on the “Better regulation for better results - An EU agenda” from May 19, 2015 (hereinafter – EU BR Agenda) in a broader context. The EU BR Agenda confirms the existing schemes and frameworks of EU Better Regulation policy, expresses a firm political commitment to continue efforts in this regard, and embraces evolutional – not revolutionary – novelties.