Product details
- Categories: Competition Law, January 2019
- Publisher: HART PUBLISHING
- Collection: Hart Studies in Competition Law
- ISBN: 9781509916443
- Publication Date: 29/11/2018
- Binding: Paperback
- Number of pages: 584
- Language: English
Summary
This book asks whether the current push to increase uniformity in
substantive and procedural competition policy and enforcement in Europe,
as well as in related institutional structures, is desirable. It
focuses on European Union (EU) competition policy and enforcement
(related to Articles 101 and 102 TFEU and the merger rules), the
equivalent rules in the Member States, and the relationships between
these different legal orders.
Uniformity has many benefits; yet,
the advantages of diversity are also legion, enabling more policy
experimentation and innovation; and improving the ability to accommodate
national preferences.
Contrary to the overwhelming view of
academics, practitioners and regulators in this area, the book argues
that uniformity is insufficient and examines ways of achieving a better
mix of uniformity and diversity (the EU's motto is 'United in
Diversity'). To achieve this better mix, the book offers a new framework
for European competition law: Co-ordinated Diversity. Finally, this
book discusses whether Co-ordinated Diversity fits with the current
legal order in the EU, as well as the EU constitutional settlement more
generally, and suggests some ways that it might be made compatible with
this order with relative ease.
The book's impact could be
significant: changing the results in individual cases; the way cases are
argued; and what information is relevant. More importantly, it builds
the theoretical foundations for fundamentally altering the way in which
the EU and the Member States' competition authorities interact, allowing
space for disagreement and uncertainty. The aim is to improve the
effiiciency and effectiveness of competition policy-making and
enforcement in Europe. It should also increase the legitimacy in this
field (rebalancing towards the Member States). Co-ordinated Diversity
provides a new way of seeing the EU that better blends difference, when
this is demanded, with uniformity and its benefits, as necessary. A
timely and ambitious work, this book will be read with interest by all
competition scholars.
Table of contents
Introduction
PART A
UNIFORMITY IS NOT ENOUGH
Part A Introduction
1. Disagreements
2. The Importance of Diversity (and Uniformity)
3. Competition Authorities, Independence and How it Undermines Diversity
Part A Conclusion
PART B
UNITING UNIFORMITY AND DIVERSITY: CO-ORDINATED DIVERSITY
Part B Introduction
4. Hierarchy
5. Regulatory Competition
6. Policy Networks
7. Learning Mechanisms
8. Co-ordinated Diversity
Part B Conclusion
PART C
CO-ORDINATED DIVERSITY AND ITS LIMITS IN THE EU
Part C Introduction
9. Legal Limits to Co-ordinated Diversity under Today's EU Rules
10. The EU Constitutional Order and Competition Law
11. EU Constitutional Limits to Co-ordinated Diversity
Part C Conclusion
Conclusion