Representative of special federal interests
Representatives of particular federal interests are stakeholders from the federal , the statutory purposes of Kriegsfolgen- and the military law be ordered. The Federal Audit Office declared them superfluous in its 2001 annual report and summarized them:
“Several federal laws provide for representatives of special federal interests who, in addition to the factually competent authorities, perform control tasks or, in addition to these, primarily pursue the financial interests of the federal government. The stakeholders are not required. Dispensing with them leads to administrative simplifications and enables the legal regulations concerned to be adjusted. "
The functions involved were:
Federal Ministry | Representative of special federal interests | Justified by |
---|---|---|
BMF | Representative of the federal interest according to Section 48 of the Reparations Damage Act (RepG) | BGBl. 1969 I p. 105 |
BMF | Representative of the federal interest according to § 56 General Law on Consequences of War (AKG) | BGBl. I p. 1747 |
BMF | Representative of the financial interests according to Section 56 of the Federal Services Act | BGBl. I p. 815 |
BMF | Representative of the financial interests according to § 18 Protection Area Act (SchBerG) | BGBl. 1956 I p. 899 |
BMF | Representatives of the federal interest according to § 45 Law on Compensation for Crew Damage | BGBl. 1955 I p. 734 |
BMI | Representing the interests of the compensation fund | BGBl. I p. 446 |
The representative of the federal interest according to Section 45 of the Law on Compensation for Occupation Damage had already been dispensed with in 1987. The regulations on the representatives of financial interests in the BLG and the SchBerG still exist. The other functions were canceled following the observations of the Federal Audit Office.
literature
- Federal Court of Auditors: Comments 2001 on the budget and economic management of the federal government .
- Dieter Lorenz : Administrative procedural law . Springer, Berlin 2012, ISBN 978-3-642-63128-3 ( limited preview in Google book search).