![]() ![]() Second, and more importantly, the longer a common policy runs the more the Commission will need detailed socio-economic and technical information about the situation on the ground in order to optimise and re-adjust its policy proposals-the production of which is the Commission’s principal task. First, the Commission is accountable before the Council and other European peers for the quality of EU interventions and has to verify and communicate the efficiency and effectiveness of joint programmes. However, the longer a common policy is conducted, the greater the Commission’s need to link-up with the implementation stage. In theoretical terms, the Commission is pulled into policy implementation because the particular conditions of the emerging multi-level policy-making style impede a clear-cut separation of tasks and responsibilities between the actors involved. ![]() In this volume the role of the European Commission in the domestic implementation of EU programmes was conceptualised theoretically and traced empirically.
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