Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Interministerial Committees

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

The Interministerial Committees, in Spain, are a collective work body and sometimes decision-making-body consisting of senior officials of the State Administration belonging to different departments. To be considered an interministerial committee it is needed to be composed by at least three members and be able to make decisions, make proposals, advise or control a specific matter.

Unlike the Government Delegated Committees, to this committees may attend officials from other administrations or representatives of social interest organizations.[1]

Remove ads

Common notes

Powers

The powers of the interministerial committees vary among themselves since their specific functions are established in their constitutive instrument. However, they need to have one of this competences:[1]

  • Decision-making powers.
  • The power for proposing or issuance of compulsory reports that should serve as a basis for decisions of other administrative bodies.
  • Powers to monitor or control the actions of other bodies of the General State Administration.

Requirements

The constitutive instrument of this committees is not always the same:[1]

  • If the chair of the committee has the rank of director-general or more, a royal decree it is needed.
  • If the chair of the committee has a lower rank of that of director-general, a joint ministerial order it is needed (this means, an order issued by the ministers of the departments involved).
Remove ads

Current committees

Summarize
Perspective

These are some of the committees that are currently active:

More information Name, Chair ...
Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads