Competition, Effects and Predictability

Rule of Law and the Economic Approach to Competition

Bruce Wardhaugh author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Published:16th Apr '20

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Competition, Effects and Predictability cover

This book offers an important new statement on the role of economics in improving lawyers’ understanding of competition law.

In the US and EU, legal analysis in competition cases is conducted on a case-by-case approach. This approach assesses each particular practice for both its legality and its welfare effects. While this analytic method has the merits of ‘getting the result right’ by, inter alia, reducing error costs in antitrust adjudication, it comes at a cost of certainty, predictability and clarity in the legal principles which govern antitrust law. This is a rule of law concern. This is the first book to explore this tension between Europe’s ‘More Economic Approach’, the US’s Rule of Reason, and the Rule of Law. The tension manifests itself in the assumptions in and choice of analytic method; the institutional agents driving this effects based approach and their competency to use and assess the results of the methodology they demand; and, the nature and stability of the legal principles used in modern effects-based competition analysis. The book forcefully argues that this approach to competition law represents a threat to the rule of law. Competition, Effects and Predictability will be of interest to European and American competition law scholars and practitioners, legal historians, policy makers and members of the judiciary.

ISBN: 9781509926060

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 568g

272 pages