Global competition law and economics

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Publication Date 2006
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Modern antitrust law is global antitrust law. Markets are becoming increasingly global, or at least multinational. Mergers between large corporations must typically get approval in both the United States and in the EU, and other nations too. Cartels in one nation affect supply in others, and countries are increasingly entering into treaties with each other about the content or enforcement of competition laws. Thus, businesspeople, lawyers, and lawmakers can no longer content themselves with understanding only the antitrust and competition law of their home country. Modern antitrust law also differs from traditional antitrust law in that it now reflects the dominance of the economic model of analysing antitrust and competition policy. Against this background, this new casebook represents the first comprehensive effort to examine US and EC competition law cases and decisions within a common analytical framework strongly based on economic theory. It is an innovative casebook addressed to all students, not only from the US and Europe, but also from all jurisdictions having competition laws, providing an in-depth analysis of the two major global antitrust regimes in the world, and a summary of the parallel antitrust laws elsewhere in the world. As such it will also serve as a useful reference for practitioners, competition officials, and policy-makers interested in competition law.

Contents:
1. Introduction
2. Which Horizontal Agreements Are Illegal?
3. What Unilateral Conduct Is Illegal?
4. Vertical Agreements that Restrict Dealing with Rivals
5. Agreements and Conduct that Arguably Distort Downstream Competition
6. Proving an Agreement or Concerted Action
7. Mergers
8. Markets that Span Multiple Antitrust Regimes

Source Link http://www.bloomsburyprofessional.com/uk/hart/
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