Economic characteristics of developing jurisdictions
their implications for competition law
Ingenaaid Engels 2015 9781783471492Samenvatting
'Economic characteristics of developing jurisdictions' contributes to the ongoing debate over what type of competition law and policy is most suitable for developing jurisdictions. Concluding that one competition model does not fit all socio-economic contexts, the book frames an alternative vision of competition rules for developing nations.
A number of different factors that influence the implementation of competition law in developing countries are analyzed, such as the content and goals of such laws, the institutional features, and the political, ideological and legal conditions that must complement law and policy. Experts in the fields of development economics and competition law discuss the key economic features that characterize most developing jurisdictions, determine how these unique characteristics influence law and policy and define how this must translate into competition law. Through this interdisciplinary exploration, the book illustrates how unique characteristics of developing jurisdictions matter when enforcing competition law.
Specificaties
Lezersrecensies
Inhoudsopgave
Mor Bakhoum and Michal S. Gal
PART I THE ECONOMIC CHARACTERISTICS OF DEVELOPING JURISDICTIONS
1. Competition Law and the Economic Characteristics of Developing Countries
Simon Evenett
2. What are the Relevant Features for Assessing Economic Competition in Developing Countries?
Ignacio De Leon
3. Lifting the Veil: Rethinking the Classification of Developing Economies for Competition Law and Policy
Tamar Indig and Michal S. Gal
4. Economic Structure and Competition Policy Application in Latin American countries
Diego Petrecolla, Esteban Greco, Carlos Romero and Juan P. Vila-Martínez
5. Understanding the Economic Factors That Have Affected China’s Anti-Monopoly Law
Pin Ling and Yue QIAO
PART II: SELECT COMPETITION RELATED ISSUES AFFECTING DEVELOPING JURISDICTIONS
6. Competition Issues Affecting the Agricultural Sector in Selected Developing Countries: Key Findings from Selected UNCTAD Market Studies
Ulla Schwager
7. The Informal Economy and its Interface with Competition Law and Policy
Mor Bakhoum
8. Bid Rigging and it’s Interface with Corruption
David Lewis
PART III ECONOMIC CHARACTERISTICS OF DEVELOPING JURISDICTIONS: IMPLICATIONS FOR COMPETITION LAW
9. Generating Instead of Protecting Competition
Oliver Budzinsky and Maryam Beigi
10. Adapting the Role of Economics in Competition Law: A Developing Country Dilemma
David J. Gerber
11. Consumer Welfare and Consumer Harm: Adjusting Competition Law and Policies to the Needs of Developing Jurisdictions
Josef Drexl
12. Drafting Competition Law for Developing Jurisdictions: Learning from Experience
Eleanor Fox and Michal S. Gal
13. Abuses of Dominance in Developing Countries: A View from the South, With an Eye on Telecoms
Javier Tapia and Simon Roberts
Index
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