This book analyses multi-level governance in competition policy,
or "antitrust federalism" as it is called by students of
competition policy, in the US and the EU from a comparative
perspective. The book compares how competition laws and authorities
of different levels - the federal and the state levels in the US
and the national and the supranational levels in the EU - interact
with each other. The EU and the US stand among the strongest
existing examples of multi-level polities and they developed mature
competition policies. Despite such similarities, however, recent
developments imply that they are moving in different directions in
the field of antitrust federalism.
Inspired by these divergent policy developments taking place at
both sides of the Atlantic, the book addresses three principal
research questions: firstly, what are the key similarities and
differences between the US and the EU in terms of antitrust
federalism; secondly, what are the reasons for differences (if
any), and finally, can the US and the EU draw any policy lessons
from each others experiences in antitrust federalism? The book is
essentially multidisciplinary in nature and it aims to initiate a
dialogue between the law and political science literatures in its
field.
The book argues that the legal literature of antitrust
federalism has employed out of date regulatory competition models
which do not reflect the complexities of policy enforcement in
modern multi-level polities. The book suggests that policy network
models provide a more suitable framework for this analysis; and it
critically reviews the British and Continental European policy
network models. The book uses the common conceptual framework of
European policy network models as the main analytical framework in
the analysis of antitrust federalism. However, the book also shows
that constitutional courts significantly affect different network
designs in different polities through interpretation of
constitutional power sharing and exercise mechanisms; and it
critiques the political science literature for overlooking such
essential role of the constitutional courts in building network
models.
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