In recent years the United Kingdom and various other countries have decided to restructure the institutions responsible for enforcing competition laws. How should a nation choose among myriad alternative arrangements? This paper lays out nine major institutional choices that governments must address in designing the implementation mechanism for a competition law. The paper discusses tradeoffs associated with each choice and examines interdependencies among different design elements. In doing so, the paper offers a structured framework that countries can use in forming new competition systems or altering existing institutional arrangements
Meeting: Competition Policy and Consumer Interest in the Global Economy, 12-13 Oct. 2001, Geneva, C
Antitrust law has been adopted by 120 jurisdictions worldwide. In more than half of these jurisdicti...
This paper asks two questions. The first is an analytical one: does the reconstruction of the sovere...
In recent years the United Kingdom and various other countries have decided to restructure the insti...
A striking diversity of competition law institutions exists around the world. There are three basic ...
The focus on good institutional design, as an important component of strong competition policy and ...
The period since 1998 has seen major changes in competition law, including: public interest was repl...
Over the past years several EU Member States decided to integrate their competition authorities with...
In recent years there has been increasing global recognition of the importance and significance of c...
peer reviewedThe details of available remedies, enforcement mechanisms and conditions of litigation ...
In the light of fundamental changes proposed in relation to competition law in Europe in 2000, Profe...
This book considers important trends and issues affecting Competition Law in the UK. "The reader wil...
Reprinted from World Competition, Vol. 43, Issue 1, Spring 2020, 107-134, with permission of Kluwer ...
The United Kingdom has recently introduced a unitary competition regime. Begining with 1979, the Uni...
The article presents an eight‐point analytical framework for the examination of key political‐instit...
Meeting: Competition Policy and Consumer Interest in the Global Economy, 12-13 Oct. 2001, Geneva, C
Antitrust law has been adopted by 120 jurisdictions worldwide. In more than half of these jurisdicti...
This paper asks two questions. The first is an analytical one: does the reconstruction of the sovere...
In recent years the United Kingdom and various other countries have decided to restructure the insti...
A striking diversity of competition law institutions exists around the world. There are three basic ...
The focus on good institutional design, as an important component of strong competition policy and ...
The period since 1998 has seen major changes in competition law, including: public interest was repl...
Over the past years several EU Member States decided to integrate their competition authorities with...
In recent years there has been increasing global recognition of the importance and significance of c...
peer reviewedThe details of available remedies, enforcement mechanisms and conditions of litigation ...
In the light of fundamental changes proposed in relation to competition law in Europe in 2000, Profe...
This book considers important trends and issues affecting Competition Law in the UK. "The reader wil...
Reprinted from World Competition, Vol. 43, Issue 1, Spring 2020, 107-134, with permission of Kluwer ...
The United Kingdom has recently introduced a unitary competition regime. Begining with 1979, the Uni...
The article presents an eight‐point analytical framework for the examination of key political‐instit...
Meeting: Competition Policy and Consumer Interest in the Global Economy, 12-13 Oct. 2001, Geneva, C
Antitrust law has been adopted by 120 jurisdictions worldwide. In more than half of these jurisdicti...
This paper asks two questions. The first is an analytical one: does the reconstruction of the sovere...