Is protecting sunk investments an economic rationale for antitrust law?

Author(s):  
Darryl Biggar ◽  
Alberto Heimler

Abstract In recent years, the economic foundation of antitrust law is increasingly being called into question. The hypothesis that antitrust law seeks to promote consumer welfare has historically been extremely popular but in recent years has come under attack. In part, this is due to the fact that neither the law, nor the decisions of competition law enforcers, can be fully explained as consistent with a strict consumer welfare standard. Neither do competition laws promote a textbook concept of total economic welfare, neither in their wording, nor in the way they are enforced. Some commentators argue that competition law should protect the competitive process, but this approach lacks a foundation in welfare economics and therefore lacks the ability to make basic trade-offs between desirable goals. This article puts forward an alternative hypothesis, which focuses on the sunk, relationship-specific investments made by market participants. We propose that an important, and overlooked, role of competition law is to protect trading partners from the threat of hold-up, where it is unreasonable for the parties to use conventional mechanisms to protect those sunk investments themselves. This approach can help to explain features of competition law and law enforcement that cannot be explained by the traditional consumer welfare or total welfare frameworks. We suggest that this approach offers promise as providing a consistent, comprehensive, economic foundation for competition law.

Author(s):  
Ariel Ezrachi

‘The goals and scope of competition and antitrust laws’ evaluates the goals and scope of competition and antitrust laws. Competition laws seek to protect the competitive process in the marketplace from companies that seek to distort it. By safeguarding free and fair markets, competition laws promote consumer welfare as well as efficiencies in the marketplace. While key competition law principles are similar across the world, competition laws are not internationally uniform, but are instead customized by each jurisdiction. A comparison can be made between US Federal Antitrust Law and the EU competition law. There are also other jurisdictions that apply competition laws, including China, Japan, and South Korea.


Author(s):  
Sungjin Kang

Since China introduced the Anti-Monopoly Law (AML) in 2008, China achieved an impressive competition law enforcement field record. However, lawyers and scholars still argue that Chinese competition authorities applied AML disproportionately against foreign companies. Despite the possibility of judicial reviews, many foreign companies still have reservation on the independent of judiciary of China, and they are still reluctant to appeal the decisions before the Chinese courts. In addition, there are some incidents where Chinese competition authorities used the AML to promote its own industrial policy. In this regard, foreign companies are not 100 per cent sure to trust the decisions of the Chinese competition authorities that they apply the AML fairly to safeguard the fair competition between Chinese companies and foreign companies. In this regard, foreign investors are trying to find a system to make sure that they are subject to ‘fair and equitable’ treatment or at least to ‘national treatment’ under the trade agreements between China and its major trading partners. The author is of the view that it is time for the foreign investors in China to consider the ISDS as an option to challenge procedural aspects of the Chinese competition law enforcements. By bringing an AML cases before the ISDS, foreign investors may induce Chinese competition authorities to comply with the due process and fair application of the competition laws, thus safeguarding transparency and predictability of the competition law enforcement of China.


Author(s):  
Richard Whish ◽  
David Bailey

This chapter provides an overview of competition law and its economic context. Section 2 describes the practices that competition laws attempt to control in order to protect the competition process. Section 3 examines the theory of competition and gives an introductory account of why the effective enforcement of competition law is thought to be beneficial for consumer welfare. Section 4 considers the expected functions of a system of competition law. Section 5 then introduces two key economic concepts, market definition and market power, that are important to a better understanding of competition policy. The chapter concludes with a table of market share figures that are significant in the application of EU and UK competition law.


Author(s):  
David J. Gerber

Chapters 5, 6, and 7 examine the targets of competition law. Key questions: Why is the conduct considered harmful? How is it pursued—for example, which remedies are used? What are the incentives and obstacles in pursuing the conduct? Where is enforcement likely—global patterns? Chapter 5 answers these questions for the two types of anticompetitive agreements. The first type includes horizontal agreements—that is, agreements between competitors. These are the most commonly pursued and heavily penalized violations in the world. Where such an agreement influences a market, it necessarily restrains competition, reducing efficiency, harming consumer welfare, impinging on economic freedom, and interfering with economic development. All competition laws target them, but they also allow justifications such as the need for cooperation in research, and competition laws vary significantly in the extent to which they allow such justifications. Vertical restraints—for example, between a manufacturer and a distributor—have a very different profile. They include, for example, agreements to fix consumer prices and to divide markets. Economists call for case-based analysis to determine their effects, and often such effects are difficult to prove, so competition laws in which economic analysis is central typically face limited enforcement against them. Many other competition laws contain specific rules condemning them.


Author(s):  
David J. Gerber

All competition laws have goals, and these goals direct decisions about what the law is and how it should be enforced. Some goals are set out in statutes; others are set by competition law institutions and courts (these are usually consistent with the formal statutory goals, but not always) formal government goals. In order to understand a specific competition law regime, it is necessary to identify the goals that shape them. Some goals are economic. These include efficiency, consumer welfare, and economic development. Other goals include fairness, privacy, and economic freedom. This chapter identifies each of these goals, probes the reasons for them, traces relationships among them, and follows some of their consequences. A key question here is: What factors determine how much influence stated goals will have on the decisions of institutions? Some institutions and individuals pursue goals that are not stated, but rather serve their own interests (e.g., corruption). The chapter refers to these goals, their origins, and their influence.


Prolegómenos ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 24 (47) ◽  
pp. 55-78
Author(s):  
Frédéric Marty

In 2005, the European Commission advocated for a more economic approach to enforcing competition laws. The sole criterion for assessing the lawfulness of a market practice should be the appraisal of its net effect on consumer welfare. The Court of Justice was reluctant to adopt such an approach until its 2017 Intel Judgment. Its endorsement—which is debatable insofar as the judgment may give rise to different interpretations—may appear paradoxical in that it is concomitant with a sharp challenge to the consumer welfare criterion in the United States. The purpose of this article is to retrace the history of this criterion, particularly its adoption in the context of EU competition law. We aim to show that the criticisms of the effects-based approach can be addressed not by moving away from the consumer welfare criterion but by integrating it into a broader perspective that also takes into account the protection of the competition process itself.


2009 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Reza Rajabiun

The relationship between the design of competition laws and economic outcomes remains the subject of considerable controversy in both law and economics. Recent cross-national studies suggest that effective legal constraints against anticompetitive practices can enhance prospects for economic development by increasing the number of market participants and the quality of broader political and economic institutions. This paper explores the linkages between regulatory constraints against anticompetitive practices and the efficiency of market mechanisms by focusing on the experience in Poland between the collapse of central planning and regulatory harmonization pursuant to European Union accession. The analysis suggests that per se prohibitions and a narrow bureaucratic mandate provided relatively credible and predictable constraints against anticompetitive agreements and practices during the formative days of the market system in Poland. The evidence has implications for other jurisdictions that instead implement the rule-of-reason approach to the design of competition law during the 1980s and 1990s.


2021 ◽  
pp. 477-500
Author(s):  
Niamh Gleeson ◽  
Ian Walden

This chapter studies the application of competition law to the provision of cloud computing services. Competition law is understood as a set of rules enforced by competition authorities that are intended to protect the process of competition and enhance consumer welfare. These rules may allow intervention in the market when competition is distorted, but also have a primary precautionary purpose which intends to prevent the act or conduct of undertakings from resulting in competition being distorted and ensure healthy competition in the market. Although cloud computing is global, the chapter focuses mainly on developments within the EU, but where relevant, refers to academic commentary relevant to cloud from a US antitrust law perspective. The application of traditional competition law to the provision of cloud computing services has been slow. Competition in markets has often also been facilitated by alternative 'regulatory' mechanisms, some of which may help ensure competition in the provision of cloud computing services. The chapter examines two such mechanisms: public procurement rules and data portability requirements.


Author(s):  
Enrico Böhme ◽  
Jonas Severin Frank ◽  
Wolfgang Kerber

AbstractIn this paper, we show that a provision in antitrust law to allow patent settlements with a later market entry of generics than the date that is expected under patent litigation can increase consumer welfare. We introduce a policy parameter for determining the optimal additional period for collusion that would incentivize the challenging of weak patents and maximize consumer welfare. While in principle, later market entry leads to higher profits and lower consumer welfare, this can be more than compensated for if more patents are challenged as a result.


2021 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 485-511
Author(s):  
Valentine Lemonnier

Before the Covid-19 pandemic hit, the scheduled passenger air transport sector was already subject to several horizontal concentrations. The mix of free competition and strict regularization in the air transport sector in the EU raises the question whether the current framework will still be able to provide a level playing field to the market participants, notably airlines and airports. The study focusses on how EU competition law has influenced horizontal concentrations (i.e. mergers and horizontal co-operations) in the scheduled passenger air transport sector. The results of the discussion are the basis for a reflection of the effects of different types of horizontal concentrations on the negotiation power of airlines vis-à-vis airports. A third focus of the study is the identification of regulatory weaknesses with regard to airport financing under the Airport Charges Directive (Directive 2009/12/EC), how those weaknesses benefit airlines and how they might interfere with efforts made under the application of competition law.


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