Affiliation:
1. Free University Berlin, Centre for European Integration, Germany
Abstract
Abstract
Postal reform has become a global trend in the age of liberalisation and privatisation. At the same time, change in this politically entrenched policy field meets with domestic resistance. This article sheds light on the politics of reform and regulation in four European and Asian countries. It is found that reform trajectories are far from being uniform and so are the emerging regulatory regimes: in view of domestic resistance France engaged in minimal change which was exclusively driven by European Union (EU) pressure; Germany initially introduced far-reaching measures, but for political motives deviated from this reform path over time; in Japan postal reform has been a side-effect of restructuring the country’s financial and banking sector, running short of introducing a regulatory framework which would effectively open up the market to competition; the preconditions for change were most favourable in Singapore, yet remaining bottlenecks may prevent that full liberalisation lives up to reality.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Public Administration,Sociology and Political Science
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