法律人 LawPlayer logo

資料由法律人 LawPlayer整理提供·EU law / curated by LawPlayer from EUR-Lex

Decision

2011/875/EU: Commission Implementing Decision of 16 December 2011 exempting certain financial services in the postal sector in Hungary from the application of Directive 2004/17/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council coordinating the procurement procedures of entities operating in the water, energy, transport and postal services sector (notified under document C(2011) 9197) Text with EEA relevance

CELEX
Directive 2004/17/EC
Date of document
Articles
2
Source
EUR-Lex
Article 1

Directive 2004/17/EC shall not apply to contracts awarded by contracting entities and intended to enable the following services to be carried out in Hungary:

(a)

services enabling cash to be placed on a payment account;

(b)

services enabling cash withdrawals from a payment account;

(c)

money transfer services;

(d)

intermediation of current accounts and the related products and services;

(e)

credit intermediation;

(f)

intermediation and acceptance of payment cards issued by credit institutions;

(g)

intermediation of investments and special purpose savings on behalf of others;

(h)

intermediation of insurance products.

Article 2

This Decision is addressed to the Republic of Hungary in accordance to the Treaties.

2 articles

Cite this act

2011/875/EU: Commission Implementing Decision of 16 December 2011 exempting certain financial services in the postal sector in Hungary from the application of Directive 2004/17/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council coordinating the procurement procedures of entities operating in the water, energy, transport and postal services sector (notified under document C(2011) 9197) Text with EEA relevance (EUR-Lex). Retrieved via LawPlayer, https://lawplayer.com/eu/act/32011D0875

© European Union, https://eur-lex.europa.eu, 1998-2026. Reuse authorised under Commission Decision 2011/833/EU, provided the source is acknowledged.

EU-EurLex-Reuse-2011-833

本頁資料來源:EUR-Lex·整理提供:法律人 LawPlayer· lawplayer.com