Antitrust / Competition Law Others

The More Economic Approach to EU Antitrust Law

By Anne C. Witt
Hart Publishing November 2016

Specifications

ISBN-13
9781849466967
Publisher
Hart Publishing
Publication
November 2016
Format
Hardback
Jurisdiction
U.K. ? Countri(es) for reference only

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Details

In the late 1990s, the European Commission embarked on a long process of introducing a ‘more economic approach’ to EU Antitrust law.

One by one, it reviewed its approach to all three pillars of EU Antitrust Law, starting with Article 101 TFEU, moving on to EU merger control and concluding the process with Article 102 TFEU. Its aim was to make EU antitrust law more compatible with contemporary economic thinking.

On the basis of an extensive empirical analysis of the Commission’s main enforcement tools, this book establishes the changes that the more economic approach has made to the Commission’s enforcement practice over the past fifteen years. It demonstrates that the more economic approach not only introduced modern economic assessment tools to the Commission’s analyses, but fundamentally changed the Commission’s interpretation of the law.

Emulating one of the key credos of the US Antitrust Revolution thirty years earlier, the Commission reinterpreted the EU antitrust rules as aiming at the enhancement of economic consumer welfare only, and amended its understanding of key legal concepts accordingly.

This book argues that the Commission’s new understanding of the law has many benefits. Its key principles are logical, translate well into workable legal concepts and promise a great degree of accuracy. However, it also has a number of serious drawbacks as it stands. The Commission’s review of Article 102 is not satisfactory. Moreover, its revised interpretation of the law is to large extents incompatible with the case law of the European Court of Justice, which has not been swayed by the exclusive consumer welfare aim. This situation is undesirable from the point of view of legal certainty and the rule of law.

Table of Contents

Part I 1. Triggers and Catalysts
2. The Process
3. The Agenda

Part II
4. A More Economic Objective
5. A More Economic Concept of Competitive Harm
6. A More Economic Concept of Countervailing Effects
7. A More Economic Test
8. A More Economic Methodology

Part III
9. Advantages
10. Compatibility with the Case Law
11. Other Concerns
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