Incomplete Contracting, Commission Discretion and the Origins of EU Merger Control
"Council Regulation 4064/89 on the Control of Concentration between Undertakings"- more commonly known as the Merger Regulation - was a watershed development in the evolution of the EU's competition policy regime. In this article we seek to cast new analytical light on what, in many respects, is an established narrative. To do this we draw on insights from the new institutional economics (NIE). Specifically, we draw on the complementary concepts of incomplete contracting and delegation. We demonstrate how the Commission utilized the discretion attendant to its delegated authority to interpret and apply the indeterminate language of treaty competition articles so as to alter the economic, political and legal environment as it pertained to merger activity. It did so to such an extent that Member States, long resistant to Commission proposals for a merger control regulation, came to regard legislative action as preferable to the uncertainty represented by the evolving status quo. Copyright (c) 2009 The Author(s). Journal compilation (c) 2009 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
Year of publication: |
2009
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Authors: | DOLEYS, THOMAS |
Published in: |
Journal of Common Market Studies. - Wiley Blackwell, ISSN 0021-9886. - Vol. 47.2009, 06, p. 483-506
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Publisher: |
Wiley Blackwell |
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