Cover of: Grenzüberschreitender kollektiver Rechtsschutz in der Europäischen Union: No New Deal for Consumers
Bettina Rentsch

Grenzüberschreitender kollektiver Rechtsschutz in der Europäischen Union: No New Deal for Consumers

[Cross-Border Collective Redress: No New Deal for Consumers]
Section: Essays
Volume 85 (2021) / Issue 3, pp. 544-578 (35)
Published 02.07.2021
DOI 10.1628/rabelsz-2021-0024
Published in German.
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  • Open Access
    CC BY 4.0
  • 10.1628/rabelsz-2021-0024
Summary
The recently adopted Directive on representative actions marks the beginning of a new era for collective redress in the European Union. However, applying the Brussels Ia and Rome Regulations for questions regarding jurisdiction, recognition, enforcement and the applicable law entails jurisdictional and choice-of-law-related problems inherent in cross-border aggregate litigation as such: European private international law, including its rules on jurisdiction and enforcement, is designed for bipartisan proceedings and thus shows a variety of inconsistencies, deficits and contradictions when faced with collective redress. Moreover, applying a multitude of laws to a single collective proceeding generates prohibitive costs for the plaintiff side, while generating economies of scale on the defendant side. It is unlikely that the parties to collective proceedings will enter a subsequent choice of law agreement to reduce the number of applicable laws.