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DG COMP Article 82 EC review

DG COMP Article 82 EC review. Rita Wezenbeek DG Competition European Commission. Discussion paper. Published on 19th December 2005 Public consultation untill end of March DG COMP hopes for serious and wide debate on paper

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DG COMP Article 82 EC review

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  1. DG COMP Article 82 EC review Rita Wezenbeek DG Competition European Commission

  2. Discussion paper • Published on 19th December 2005 • Public consultation untill end of March • DG COMP hopes for serious and wide debate on paper • Paper concerns exclusionary abuses only; exploitative abuses and discrimination follow at later stage.

  3. Review of Article 82 • More systematic and transparent approach will clarify policy and facilitate consistent approach throughout EU • Continuation of work done in other areas • Vertical restraints BER + Guidelines • Horizontal Guidelines; • Article 81 (3) Guidelines; • Technology transfer BER+ Guidelines; • Horizontal Merger Guidelines

  4. Making it operational • In economic law, a trade-off between different objectives is generally required: • Identifying the effects of individual case; • Establishing clear-cut and predictable rules and • Delivering results within reasonable time limits.

  5. Art. 82: ‘Form based approach’vs ‘effects based approach’ • Form based approach: risk of certainty at too high a cost of false positives and false negatives • ‘Pure’ effects case by case approach: may provide correct outcome in each case but risk of uncertainty and too (s)low enforcement Conclusion: • Need a combination- elements of form and effect and a fair division of the burden of proof to ensure operational rules • Rules anchored in economic principles to help consistency and predictability

  6. Central framework exclusionary abuses • Essential objective of 82 is to protect competition as a means to protect consumer welfare • Central concern is foreclosure that hinders competition and thereby harms consumers • Protection of competition, not protection of competitors against competition • Equal right of dominant firms and of residual competitors to compete on the merits

  7. Structure of proposed appraoch • General framework • Individual categories of abuse • More specific concerns and criteria • Operational crfiteria justifying presumptions Possibility to rebut presumptions • Defences

  8. General analysis • Does conduct have capability to foreclose? • Investigate form and nature • Does it have a likely or actual market distorting foreclosure effect? • Incidence; • Degree of dominance • Networkeffects? • Economies of scale/ scope? ‘Sliding scale approach’ • Exception for conduct which creates no other benefit than that it raises obstacles to residual competition.

  9. Application to price based abuses Predation, loyalty rebates, mixed bundling • Inefficient competitors should normally not be protected by competition law • Only exclusion of “as efficient” competitors abusive • Normally costs of dominant company benchmark for competition on the merits • More dynamic approach to also include “potentially efficient” firms? (i.e. new entrants, still expanding firms, economies of scale, learning curve, incumbent advantages, etc.)

  10. Defences • Objective necessity • constraint that applies to all undertakings in the market • is the prima facie abusive conduct actually necessary on the basis of objective factors external to the dominant company? • ‘Meeting competition’ • dominant company may defend its own commercial and economic interests in the face of action taken by certain competitors • conduct that may seem abuse is actually a loss minimising reaction to competition from others • suitable, indispensable and proportionate • ‘Efficiencies’

  11. Efficiency defence • Efficiency defense needed since same conduct can be both efficiency-enhancing and restrictive (all effects approach) • No exemption possible: Successful efficiency defense must lead to conclusion that conduct is not abusive • Consistency required with analytical framework of Art. 81(3) and merger control

  12. How does it work? • Single branding • Form and nature: capability to foreclose, unless rivals can curb and counter loyalty effect; • Incidence: • Percentage of ty • Tied market share • Selective buyers • Right to terminate at short notice?

  13. Tying and bundling • In general: approach developed in case law and decision practice • Mixed bundling: price based behaviour • Can as efficient competitor compete?

  14. Refusal to supply/license • De novo requests for supply • Bronner and IMS framework • Terminations of existing relationships • Likely market distorting foreclosure effect • Both situations • Negative impact on incentive to innovate as possible objective justification

  15. Consequences for Nat. Courts? • No radical shift in policy→ Discussion paper presents analysis of harm to competition and consumers on basis of sound economic assessment; • Aim is not to end enforcement of Article 82; • New policy will invite Courts to ask the right questions and consider arguments/evidence based on economic effects; • Identifies circumstances which justify assumption of abuse and which may rebut assumption; • Identifies general assessment criteria for specific categories of conduct in case assumptions cannot be made.

  16. Conclusion Do participate in the consultation!

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