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Global Competition - Law, Markets, and Globalization (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,350
Discovery Miles 13 500
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Global Competition - Law, Markets, and Globalization (Paperback)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Donate to Against Period Poverty
Total price: R1,360
Discovery Miles: 13 600
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Global competition now shapes economies and societies in ways
unimaginable only a few years ago, and competition (or 'antitrust')
law is a key component of the legal framework for global
competition. These laws are intended to protect competition from
distortion and restraint, and on the national level they reflect
the relationships between markets, their participants, and those
affected by them. The current legal framework for the global
economy is provided, however, by national laws and institutions.
This means that those few governments that have sufficient 'power'
to apply their laws to conduct outside their own territory provide
the norms of global competition. This has long meant that the US
(and, more recently, the EU) structure global competition, but
China and other countries are increasingly using their economic and
political leverage to apply their own competition laws to global
markets. The result is increasing uncertainty, costs, and conflicts
that burden global economic development. This book examines
competition law on the global level and reveals its often complex
and little-understood dynamics. It focuses on the interactions
between national and international legal regimes that are central
to these dynamics and a key to understanding them. Part I examines
the evolution of the current global system, the factors that have
shaped it, how it operates today, and recent efforts to alter that
system-e.g., by including competition law in the WTO. Part II
focuses on national competition law systems, revealing how national
laws and experiences shape global competition law dynamics and how
global factors, in turn, shape national laws and experiences. It
examines the central roles of US and European law and experience,
and it also pays close attention to countries such as China that
are playing increasingly important roles in the global competition
law arena. Part III analyzes current strategies for improving the
legal framework for global competition and identifies the factors
that may contribute to a system that more effectively supports
global economic and political development. This analysis also
suggests a pathway for moving toward that goal.
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