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Sergiy Kvitka, Yevgeniy Borodin, Volodymyr Yemelyanov, Mykhailo Moskalets y Viktoriia
Zubchenko
The Subsidiarity Principle and Legal and Economic Aspects of The Decentralization in Ukraine
According to the principle of the subsidiarity, the government should
be as close as possible to the citizens. The state should take the initiative
only in those issues where the capabilities of independent individuals and
organizations are insufcient. If the task can be solved at the local level as
effectively as at the national level, the preference should be given to the
local level. This principle works not only for governments, but also for all
those in power: parties, corporations, trade unions, leaders of political
movements, large business and banking structures.
The subsidiarity principle is based on the autonomy of the individual
and their self-esteem. All forms of society - from the family to international
bodies - must serve the individual. It is also followed by the fact that the
source of the political power is the people. At the same time, the personalism
states that people by their nature feel the necessity to communicate and want
to be members of the basic units of society, such as the family, the parish,
the neighborhood, the professional community, the volunteer organization.
These cells act as intermediaries between a person and larger structures
and, thus, give them real power. This scheme is reproduced at the level of
medium and large public structures. This leads to the conclusion that the
delegation of power to higher levels of government should be carried out
only if it is really needed. In particular, the state can use its power only to
the extent, necessary for the common good.
From an ethical point of view, the subsidiarity obliges the state and
society to create conditions for the full development of the individual,
including the provision of socio-economic human rights and security
(Nazarova et al., 2019). The state is obliged to respect the independence of
individuals and organizations, but, at the same time, it should promote the
establishment of links between them. Even though it has no right to impose
restrictions on the fair demands of individuals, but it must protect some
members of society from the harm, connected with the private interests of
others.
However, the subsidiarity not only recognizes the limitations of the
central government, but also suggests a methodology for determining
the scope of local government powers. In 1985, the European Charter of
Local Self-Government (1985), going from the subsidiarity principle,
assigned local administrations to solve all tasks, except those that they can’t
overcome. Thus, Article 4, paragraphs 3, 4, 5 and 6 of the Charter states:
Public powers are performed mainly by those authorities which are the closest
to the citizens. The transfer of any function of any power body to another authority
should be carried out taking into account the scope and nature of the specic task,
as well as the requirements of the efciency and economy”, “As a rule, powers,
granted to local governments, should be complete and exclusive. They may be
questioned or restricted by any other central or regional authority only within the
limits, established by law”, “When delegating powers to any central or regional