3. Competition Law: General + Article 101(1)/Section 2: Restrictive Practices Flashcards
What is the general history of competition law?
- Sherman Act [ the magna carta of free enterprise ]1890 (USA)
- The modern model is adopted from this Act and American Constitutional Law.
- German adoption of Sherman Act (or similar) in 1957
- German’s attribute the rebirth of their economy to the Sherman Act.
- The EEC Treaty 1958 (introduced competition law into the UK)
- German’s pushed this because (1) economy flourished (2) necessary to fulfil treaty obligations to create a common market.
- The Competition Act 1998 (UK (late to the party))
- This mirrors the EEC Treaty (now TFEU)
Thus in the UK we are now subject to competition law under the TFEU (EU level) and also under the Competition Act 1998 (domestic level) (but both essentially say the same thing).
What is the main purpose of competition law?
Competition law [This is called the law of concurrence in most EU countries. ] relates to markets. It does NOT regulate the market place. But it hinders competition and regulates market operators in order to ensure the market remains free.
What makes up competition law?
- Monopoly
- Cartels
- Oligopoly
- Mergers and takeovers
What is the “snip test”?
This is the non-transitory increase in price test which determines whether a market is distinct.
If the price of product A went up 5% for X period of time, would people abandon product A and go to product B. If yes, then A + B make up part of the same product market. If no, then product A is a market on its own [e.g. does whiskey compete with whiskey or whiskey including other spirits; do roses compete with roses or roses including other flowers].
What is absolute market power (monopoly)?
If there is only one supplier then it is a monopoly market. The monopolist is not buffeted by competition. These markets have created problems since Roman Law.
Example: A wants to buy whisky. Sees a malt whisky (~£25 per bottle) and a blended whisky (~£15 per bottle). If these were competing products then nobody would buy a single malt whisky since it is so much dearer than blended. But because there are sufficient people to keep a single malt whisky industry afloat, the two products probably don’t constitute a single market - they are different products.
What is perfect competition?
This lies at the other end of the continuum to a monopoly. It is a market with perfect competition, perfect knowledge between suppliers and buyers. This is ideal but rare. What we usually see is something somewhere along a continuum.
What is a cartel?
This means “truce”. It is undertakings which will distort the market, limit production, share markets. It is an agreement not to compete. Operators who collude amongst themselves to distort the market and create disadvantage to consumer welfare
What are the two basic questions that must be asked in considering cases of competition law?
1) What is the market?
2) Once the market has been defined, the next question is to identify the different firms / players in the market
⁃ If there is one player then this is a monopoly. A monopoly is not good for competition since it gives absolute market power since there is noone to compete with.
⁃ If there are an infinite number of players and an infinite number of consumers and no barriers to entry/exit, perfect access to resources necessary to operate in the market, no profit taking except just about the variable cost, perfect information available to market participants and buyers then this is perfect competition. But perfect competition only exists in theory.
⁃ In some situations the different players will join forces to act in a particular way which is contrary to natural competition to gain market power in the form of a cartel. The reason is that if competitors decide to join forces rather than to compete they can make more money.
Article 101 TFEU / s 2 Competition Act
addresses cartels
Article 102 TFEU / s 18 Competition Act
addresses monopolies
What is collusion?
Where there is no competition on price between different players in a market e.g. heating, petrol, electricity, mortgages.
To whom are the Competition law provisions addressed?
They are addressed at ‘undertakings’. This is of very broad application - it is not defined in the treaties or the legislation. It is any entity engaged in economic activity[ defined in Hoffman] (includes both natural and juridical persons).
What is the exception to the provisions being addressed at ‘undertakings’?
The one exception which started under German law is that if you are a natural person buying goods or services for your own consumption then you aren’t an undertaking. The Germans assumed this would apply equally to Articles 101/102. And if it applies to these Articles it also applies to the Competition Act (because
s 60 of the Competition Act states that this statute is to be interpreted in conformity with the European Rules): s 2 - addresses cartels and s 18 - addresses monopolies.
Federación Nacional de Empresas de Instrumentación Científica, Médica, Técnica y Dental (FENIN) v Commission [2003]
Producers of medical equipment in Spain. They argued that the Spanish National Health Service was a monopoly and was doing something unlawful, contrary to competition law. Court said: it is the final buyer but consumed them itself, therefore they are not an undertaking. It is not clear why the court said this and Robert Lane disagrees. So the Spanish SNS is excused from competition law because it is not an undertaking (cf. NHS in England). If the NHS went into the private sector it would become an undertaking. So the final consumer is not an undertaking.
the ECJ held that all final purchases are not undertakings. Thus FENIN went further than the Germans did (the Germans held only that natural persons who bought for their own consumption were not natural persons) since it means that juridical persons who purchase for their own consumption were not undertakings. And an employee is not an undertaking = final exception. Otherwise, any body or entity which engages in economic activity is an undertaking, so subject to Article 101 and 102.
TFEU Article 101
⁃ “1. The following shall be prohibited as incompatible with the common market: all agreements[ “Agreements” are not defined - thus they have a broad application.] between undertakings, decisions by associations of undertakings and concerted practices which may affect trade between Member States and which have as their object or effect the prevention, restriction or distortion of competition within the common market.
⁃ 2. Any agreements or decisions prohibited pursuant to this Article shall be automatically void.”