Demand management

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The demand management (also demand coverage management or fiscal auxiliary business ) is to provide personnel, material resources and services. It is a special administrative task that should enable the actual administrative tasks to be carried out (see also: Public administration ). There are three options for action:

  • Shopping at the market
  • The in-house production
  • The expropriation

Most of the necessary material resources (office supplies, vehicles, buildings, etc.) and services (construction work, reports, etc.) are procured on the market. The administrative authority makes use of the private law provisions. This also gives rise to the jurisdiction of the civil courts (not the administrative courts ) in disputes. However, there is still a binding through relevant public law provisions, in particular the basic rights (e.g. observance of the principle of equality ( Art. 3 (1) GG) when awarding contracts).

In-house production can take place, for example, by employing our own staff who repair administrative facilities or do research.

The expropriation is for procurement of individual asset items that are not available for purchase (for example, expropriation of land for construction of a road).

The demand management can act as a control management through the targeted award of contracts .

The scope of demand management for Germany is estimated to be between 250 and 300 billion euros per year.

See also

Individual evidence

  1. Hartmut Maurer: General Administrative Law , 2009, § 3 Rn. 20 ff.
  2. Hartmut Maurer: Staatsrecht I , 2010, § 8 Rn. 94 f.
  3. Hartmut Maurer: General Administrative Law , 2009, § 3 Rn. 21st
  4. Dirk Ehlers in Erichsen / Ehlers: General Administrative Law , 2006, § 1 Rn. 43.