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The past decade has witnessed a proliferation of regulatory
agencies at both the national and the EU level. This coherent and
clearly structured book is the first of its kind to analyse in
equal measure, and interdependently, both national regulatory
authorities and European agencies. It brings together a select
group of highly esteemed contributors - authorities in their fields
- to provide a systematic and over-arching view of regulation in
the EU. Unlike many of the previous attempts to shed light on this
increasingly opaque and complex co-existence of regulatory systems,
this book takes a genuinely multi-disciplinary approach with
integrated perspectives from law, politics and economics. Exploring
firstly the rationales for the existence of agencies, the book then
goes on to examine how agencies are designed in the EU before
considering the legal and political challenges they raise, and
finally comparing them with international agencies and agencies in
an enlarged Europe and the wider world. Academic researchers in the
fields of law, economics and politics will find Regulation through
Agencies in the EU of great interest as will EU law practitioners,
policymakers and regulators in Europe.
The opening of the European postal market to competition is gaining
ground as Member States transpose the 1997 postal directive into
their national legislation and private postal companies expand
their market shares. Moreover, changing regulatory trends (for
example, the ever-lower weight and price limits delimitating the
scope of the reserved area) encourage further growth in the
continuing liberalization of this important network industry. In
this informative symposium, 19 practitioners and academics expert
in postal sector dynamics present detailed research findings,
analysis, and recommendations. The book is based on a conference
held in Brussels in February 2001, under the auspices of the
Universities of Liege and Ghent and the Free University of
Brussels. It provides an in-depth assessment of the challenges
presented not only by the prospect of liberalization but also by
the transition (of particular significance during the next few
years) from the traditional monopoly system. Among the critical
matters discussed are the following: terminal dues for
international mail; remail provisions; the UPU and WTO constraints
on the European postal market; EU Commission decisions and ECJ case
law interpreting the postal directive; the effects of EC Treaty
Articles 81 and 82 and the Merger Control Regulation; abuse of
market power, especially by incumbent public postal operators; the
"essential facilities" doctrine; and funding of universal service
obligations. In addition, there are specific country reports from
five EU Member States (France, Germany, Italy, Portugal, and the
United Kingdom) and Norway, bearing witness to the diversity of
means adopted to implement the postal directive. Business persons
and their counsel, regulatory officials, practitioners, and
academics interested in the creation of an EU-wide postal market-as
well as in the ongoing reliability and improvement of postal
service - should find this text valuable.
In this edited work, European experts in the energy field provide
perspectives on the principal issues raised by the liberalization
of the electricity and natural-gas markets in the EU. The various
analyses are collected under four headings. Part One - Competition
- discusses how, even when the market is fully open, substantial
impediments to competition remain, such as long-term contracts,
refusal of access to essential infrastructures or lack of capacity
in interconnectors. Contributors discuss these deadlocks and
suggest possible breakthroughs. In Part Two - Transmission and
Trading - experts deal with network access and pricing and energy
trading. Third-party access to the network is a critical factor in
ensuring a real liberalization of the market, but it raises complex
technical, economic and legal issues. Liberalization has also
stimulated new forms of energy trading, including physical
contracts and purely financial tools. The legal and economic
framework of these new forms of transactions is discussed. In Part
Three - Environment and Consumer Protection - experts investigate
the extent to which the liberalization process favours industrial
interests and explore in what ways environmental and consumer
concerns are (or could be) an integral part of liberalized energy
policy. Finally, in National Experiences, contributors discuss
different approaches taken by four Member States (Belgium, France,
Germany and The Netherlands) in opening their energy markets.
Key features:- Edited by leading academics and an experienced
practitioner - Combines both practical insight and scholarly
analysis - A rich compendium of commentary and analysis on all the
main themes of competition law - Extensive coverage of both
substantive, procedural and enforcement issues in two volumes.
Handbook on European Competition Law: Substantive Aspects sets the
context for examination of substantive law by reviewing and
analyzing the goals of competition law. It then covers the
substantive building blocks of EU competition law, including
horizontal and vertical agreements, cartels, mergers, and also
provides valuable coverage of the interaction between competition
and regulation, hub and spoke collusion, and information exchange
agreements. The importance of the abuse of dominance doctrine is
reflected in three discrete chapters considering exploitative
abuses, exclusionary pricing abuses, and exclusionary non-pricing
abuses. The companion volume, Handbook on European Competition Law:
Enforcement and Procedure, sets out in detail the procedural
aspects of EU Competition Law, ranging from fines, remedies and
judicial review. It also gives unique insight into both private and
public enforcement of completion law, and offers commentary on the
relationship between EU competition law and national competition
law, and on the relationship between competition law and private
international law. This Handbook will be an indispensable reference
work for practitioners and scholars, as well as for those in an
enforcement environment. Contributors: S. Anderman, A. Coscelli, G.
Edwards, G. Faella, M.S. Gal, A. Jones, I. Kokkoris, I. Lianos, L.
Lovdahl Gormsen, D. Mantzari, L.D.S. Morais, R. Nazzini, O. Odudu,
N. Petit, A. Stephan, J. Tapia, F. Wagner-von Papp
Key features:- Edited by leading academics and an experienced
practitioner - Combines both practical insight and scholarly
analysis - A rich compendium of commentary and analysis on all the
main themes of competition law - Extensive coverage of both
substantive, procedural and enforcement issues in two volumes.
Handbook on European Competition Law: Enforcement and Procedure
sets out in detail the procedural aspects of EU competition law,
ranging from fines, remedies and judicial review. It also gives
unique insight into both private and public enforcement of
completion law, and offers commentary on the relationship between
EU competition law and national competition law, and on the
relationship between competition law and private international law.
The companion volume, Handbook on European Competition Law:
Substantive Aspects, sets the context for examination of
substantive law by reviewing and analyzing the goals of competition
law. It then covers the substantive building blocks of EU
competition law, including horizontal and vertical agreements,
cartels, mergers, and also provides valuable coverage of the
interaction between competition and regulation, hub and spoke
collusion, and information exchange agreements. The importance of
the abuse of dominance doctrine is reflected in three discrete
chapters considering exploitative abuses, exclusionary pricing
abuses, and exclusionary non-pricing abuses. This Handbook will be
an indispensable reference work for practitioners and scholars, as
well as for those in an enforcement environment. Contributors: A.
Andreangeli, K. Cseres, C. Genakos, D. Geradin, D.M.B. Gerard, Y.
Katsoulacos, A.P. Komninos, N. Levy, I. Lianos, C. Malamataris,
B.J. Rodger, H. Schweitzer, D. Ulph, J. Wileur
Economic regulation in the telecommunications sector can be performed through economy-wide instruments, such as antitrust law and antitrust authorities, or through sector-specific instruments, such as telecommunications regulation and regulatory authorities. Relying on a comparative analysis of five countries, the present book seeks to shed some light on the respective roles of both types of instruments in liberalized telecommunications markets.
Regulatory Competition and Economic Integration addresses one of the hottest policy questions on both sides of the Atlantic. Esty and Geradin bring together top-notch scholars from both Europe and the United States to examine the various aspects of the debate between 'harmonization' and 'regulatory competition' across three comparative dimensions. The book provides a sharp focus on the circumstances that would yield gains from regulatory competition and to contrast those cases where heightened co-operation in standard setting or broader regulatory harmonization might increase social welfare.
Trade and the Environment is a penetrating analysis of the relation
between trade and environmental protection policies in the EC and
the US. It argues that the international tensions arising from
policies designed to protect trade and the environment can be
resolved by the free trade provisions of the EC Treaty and the US
Constitution, and from the setting of common environmental
standards for all parties. It discusses also the contributions of
the judiciary and legislature toward the solution of these
tensions. The interaction between them, writes Dr Geradin, shapes
the balance between trade and environmental objectives in the
Community and the United States. More generally, they define the
progress of environmental protection in these systems.
This book provides an in-depth exploration of the Digital Markets
Act (DMA). With an ensemble of contributors who have been involved
in major antitrust cases that shaped the legislative text, the book
explains the rationale for the DMA, introduces the reader to the
digital services falling within its scope, and provides insights
into the interpretation issues and enforcement challenges that
arise from the obligations it establishes. Analysing the DMA in the
broader legal and market context, the chapters examine tensions
between the DMA and other (EU and national) rules governing the
conduct of online platforms, compare the DMA to similar initiatives
undertaken in other jurisdictions, and bring perspectives from
other disciplines, such as data protection regulation. A companion
website reports on important developments in relation to the DMA,
such as the decisions designating tech giants as gatekeepers and
subsequent litigation arising therefrom, and provides links to
analysis discussing the developments. An authoritative treatment of
the DMA is paired with an easy-to-follow writing style to make this
comprehensive compendium essential reading for practitioners,
judges, regulators, and researchers working on matters relating to
the digital economy.
This is the first EU competition law treatise that fully integrates
economic reasoning in its treatment of the decisional practice of
the European Commission and the case-law of the European Court of
Justice. Since the European Commission's move to a "more economic
approach" to competition law reasoning and decisional practice, the
use of economic argument in competition law cases has become a
stricter requirement. Many national competition authorities are
also increasingly moving away from a legalistic analysis of a
firm's conduct to an effect-based analysis of such conduct, indeed
most competition cases today involve teams composed of lawyers and
industrial organisation economists.
Competition law books tend to have either only cursory coverage of
economics, have separate sections on economics, or indeed are far
too technical in the level of economic understanding they assume.
Ensuring a genuinely integrated approach to legal and economic
analysis, this major new work is written by a team combining the
widely recognised expertise of two competition law practitioners
and a prominent economic consultant. The book contains economic
reasoning throughout in accessible form, and, more pertinently for
practitioners, examines economics in the light of how it is used
and put to effect in the courts and decision-making institutions of
the EU. A general introductory section sets EU competition law in
its historical context. The second chapter goes on to explore the
economics foundations of EU Competition law. What follows then is
an integrated treatment of each of the core substantive areas of EU
competition law, including Article 101 TFEU, Article 102 TFEU,
mergers, cartels and other horizontal agreements, vertical
restraints and technology transfer agreements.
Trade and the Environment is a penetrating analysis of the relation
between trade and environmental protection policies in the EC and
the US. It argues that the international tensions arising from
policies designed to protect trade and the environment can be
resolved by the free trade provisions of the EC Treaty and the US
Constitution, and from the setting of common environmental
standards for all parties. It discusses also the contributions of
the judiciary and legislature toward the solution of these
tensions. The interaction between them, writes Dr Geradin, shapes
the balance between trade and environmental objectives in the
Community and the United States. More generally, they define the
progress of environmental protection in these systems.
This edited collection consolidates research on the current and
future perspectives of international trade law applicable to
telecommunications services and audiovisual services in a context
of convergence. It is divided into three main parts. The first part
analyses the current regulatory framework applicable to
telecommunications services in the context of the WTO, including
the controversial issues of accounting rates and international
competition rules. The second part discusses and analyses the
current regulatory framework applicable to audiovisual services.
The third part analyses convergence from different angles,
including an explanation of convergence in technical terms, as well
as reviewing the legal and economic consequences of convergence for
trade in telecommunications and audiovisual services. This research
lead the editors to summarize the findings made in the chapters and
to draw a tentative set of issues to be discussed in the context of
the Doha Round of negotiations.
This is the second edition of the acclaimed text on global
antitrust law. With markets becoming increasingly global, mergers
requiring approval in several different jurisdictions, cartels in
one nation affecting supply in others, and countries increasingly
entering into treaties with each other about the content or
enforcement of competition laws, antitrust law is now a truly
global phenomenon. Modern antitrust law is also different because
it now reflects an increasingly economic approach to analysing
antitrust and competition policy. This innovative work is the only
truly comparative and economically sophisticated casebook on the
market. Addressed to students from all jurisdictions having
competition laws, this casebook provides an in-depth analysis of
the two major global antitrust regimes in the world, as well as a
summary of selected national antitrust laws. As such it will also
serve as a useful reference for practitioners, competition
officials and policy-makers interested in competition law. In the
four years since the first edition, the increased globalization of
antitrust law has continued apace. China, the world's third largest
economy after the EU and US, has adopted an antitrust law and other
nations have modified and modernized their antitrust regimes. The
EU has adopted a new EU Treaty, new EU guidelines on abuse of
dominance, new EU guidelines on non-horizontal mergers, and new EU
regulations and guidelines on vertical agreements. In the US there
have been important new Supreme Court cases (the 2009 Linkline and
2010 American Needle decisions) and the appearance of a new
economic approach in the revised 2010 U.S. Merger Guidelines. This
new edition expands and updates the pioneering approach of the
first edition, addressing new developments not only in the US and
EU, but also in Australia, Brazil, Canada, Israel, Japan, South
Africa, and South Korea, with expanded coverage of China's new
antitrust law, and the antitrust laws of Argentina, Chile,
Colombia, Egypt, India, Indonesia, New Zealand, Peru, Russia, Saudi
Arabia, Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand, Turkey, and Venezuela. Praise
for the first edition '...worthy of considerable praise...contains
a vast collection of well-chosen material taking in a wide span of
both antitrust and merger law issues. It is well written and clear
throughout, particularly on the economic concepts, and provides
incisive commentary and questions which inspire further study.'
Peter Whelan, Cambridge Law Journal 'Enlightened law professors and
law schools will best serve their students not by teaching national
competition law but by adopting Global Competition Law and
Economics...an excellent book for introductory courses in
comparative competition law at either a graduate or undergraduate
level.' Okeoghene Odudu, Common Market Law Review '...the best
four-and-a-half centimetres of shelf-space that I have seen devoted
to competition law and policy issues for a very long time".' Yvonne
van Roy, New Zealand Law Journal 'Free from the
ideologically-driven perspective that can affect other antitrust
casebooks, this is also the first casebook organized from inception
with an eye directly on the global context...this book may be used
in a classroom in Europe just as it will be used in the U.S. The
result is a highly welcome contribution to the evolution of
competition studies.' Judge Douglas Ginsburg '...this book is the
only one on the market that is extremely well suited for use in a
comparative antitrust law class...an extraordinarily teachable book
that contains everything you might want to present...Finally, the
comparative antitrust field has a standard textbook to use. And a
wonderful standard it is.' Robert H Lande, University of Baltimore
Law School
The significant evolution of EU competition law in the last 15
years has been fundamentally influenced by economic theory, and
economic aspects of cartel prosecution are increasingly relevant in
modern competition practice. EU Cartel Law and Economics is the
first book-length assessment of cartels from an integrated law and
economics perspective. This perspective allows for a more
insightful evaluation of the wide variety of practices at the
intersection between collusive restrictions of competition and
pro-competitive agreements between firms. It sheds light on the
underlying mechanics of cartels, including how to detect
anti-competitive conspiracies in the absence of hard evidence. It
also provides a more conceptual approach to cartel law, outlining
ways in which the current legal structure can be applied more
effectively to deter anti-competitive conduct without discouraging
pro-competitive forms of cooperation between firms. The book is
divided into four parts: the first part provides a conceptual
overview of the law and economics of cartels; the second part
describes the central legal analysis in cartel cases; the third
part summarises the regulatory process in cartel investigations;
and the fourth part deals with civil damages. EU Cartel Law and
Economics is a topical and innovative reference work written by
recognised experts in the field.
Trade and Environment provides a complete set of the major dispute settlement or judicial decisions on environment-related issues under three international trade regimes: the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) and its successor the World Trade Organization (WTO); the Canada-USA Free Trade Agreement (precursor to the North America Free Trade Agreement); and the European Community. It also provides extracts from other cases dealing with issues relevant to future trade and environment controversies. A convenient compendium for policy makers in government and NGOs, academic researchers, students, and business advisors.
The text explores the many legal and economic challenges emerging
from the liberalization process engaged by the European Community
with respect to state monopolies. It is divided into three parts.
Taking a sectoral approach, the first part is devoted to expert
analyses of the liberalization measures adopted by the Community in
the areas of telecommunications, postal services, energy and air
and rail transport. The objective is to provide a detailed and
up-to-date review of the most significant developments that have
taken place in these key industry sectors. The second part deals
with more conceptual issues, such as the impact of the
liberalization process on consumer protection and public service
obligations. It also analyzes the main issues emerging from the
creation of "strategic alliances" in the telecommunications and
aviation sectors. The third part takes a comparative and
international law perspective. It examines the extent to which
monopolies have been opened to competition in the United States and
the lessons which may be drawn from the American experience. It
also discusses the liberalization measures negotiated in the
framework of the World Trade Organization, with a special reference
to the agreement recently concluded in the area of
telecommunications. The papers written in the book are by leading
experts on state monopolies, and take a pluridisciplinary approach
covering not only legal but also economic and political science
issues.
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