Now also available as
eBook
Antitrust is ‘a blunt instrument aimed at the wrong problem’. So say the
authors of this provocative and contentious book, both of them well-known for
providing antitrust support and training in many developing economies and for
serving as antitrust experts on behalf of private parties targeted by
antitrust authorities. Drawing on their wide experience, they describe how
antitrust/ competition rules in developing economies curtails innovation and
entrepreneurship under what the U.S. Supreme Court has blasted as the
‘chilling effects of false positives’. Moreover, they point out, entrenched
interest groups in developing countries quickly discover that soliciting
preferential treatment from the state, which leads to state-sponsored
non-tariff barriers, is more attractive than private cartelization, not least
because it is perfectly legal and thus beyond the reach of antitrust law
enforcement efforts.
What the authors offer is a thoroughgoing analysis clearly demonstrating that,
whatever economic path developing countries pursue, imposing Western-style
antitrust regimes will engender uncertainty, chill economic behaviour, and
foster an unhealthy climate for business. They employ the influential
error-cost methodology to appraise the performance of competition policy and
to show how such a policy creates irresolvable tensions in fragile economies
with weak institutions – economies characterized by informal rules of business
practice, long-standing symbiotic business state relationships, and
unpredictable state action. They mount a powerful critique of the arguments of
neo-institutionalists (who fail to recognize the vulnerable nature of emerging
market economies) and competition ‘advocates’ (who presume to stand ready and
vigilant to enforce competition policy on state entities). But competition
policy in developing economies is not an irremediable mistake. Such regimes
need not adhere to an inappropriate Western model, the authors maintain, to
find cheaper and more effective ways to foster competition. As a detailed and
insightful description and framework defining the limits to antitrust in
developing (and especially least-developed) countries, this study promises to
extend the debate that should precede any consideration of globally extending
competition policy in its current version. Crafters of policies and rules in
competition law and administration cannot fail to gain in depth of
understanding from this new approach to the subject.
About the Authors. List of abbreviations. Preface. Acknowledgments. Chapter
1. Introduction. Chapter 2. The Emergence of Competition Policy
Regimes Chapter 3. The Errors of Antitrust Chapter 4. The
Performance Gap. Chapter 5. What is Competition Policy? Chapter 6
. Sources of Error in Antitrust Practice. Chapter 7. What is Different
in Developing and Transition Economies? Chapter 8. The Political
Economy of Antitrust Enforcement Chapter 9. International Harmonization
of Competition Policy Chapter 10. The Limits of Competition Advocacy.
Chapter 11. Concluding Comments Bibliography. Table of Cases and Statutes.
Index.