Title: Antitrust
1Antitrust Sector Regulation Communications
sectorCento Veljanovskicento_at_casecon.comCase
Associates
- Expert Competition Law Workshop for National
Judges, - Sponsored by EC Commission
- Fondation Universitaire, Brussels
- 31 March 2005
Case Associates - Competition Regulatory
Economists www.casecon.com
2Roadmap
- sectoral regulation of network industries based
on antitrust principles i.e. EC communications
regulation - focus on application, similarities differences
- critical assessment
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3NRF Package
5 Directives market definition 3 dominance
concepts 18 pre-defined markets 27 competition
problems 7 remedies 4 principles
- Directives
- SMP guidelines
- Recommendation
- ERG Common Position on Remedies
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4 National Implementation
market share
proportionality
Remedies
Market Definition
SMP
Market Analysis
SSNIP predefined markets
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5 18 regulated markets
Wholesale Level Fixed call origination Fixed
call termination Fixed transit services Unbundled
access Broadband access Terminating segments of
leased lines Trunk segments of leased
lines Mobile access and call origination Mobile
voice call termination Mobile international
roaming Broadcast transmission services
Retail level Residential fixed telephony
networks Non-residential fixed telephony
networks Residential international fixed
telephony services Residential local/national
fixed telephony services Non-Residential
international fixed telephony services Non-residen
tial local/national fixed telephony
services Minimum set of leased lines
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6 27 competition problems
Market constellation Competition problems 1.
vertical leveraging Refusal to
supply Discriminatory use/withholding
information Delay Bundling /tying Undue
requirements Quality discrimination Strategic
product design Undue use of information about
competitors Price discrimination Cross
subsidisation Predatory pricing 2. horizontal
leveraging Bundling/tying Cross-subsidisation
3. single market dominance Strategic product
design to raise consumers switching cost
costs Contract terms to raise consumers
switching costs Exclusive dealing Predatory
pricing lack of investment Excessive
costs/inefficiency Low quality 4.
termination Tacit collusion Excessive
pricing Price discrimination Refusal to
deal/denial of interconnection
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7 Remedies (wholesale)
transparency non-discrimination accounting
separation access price control/cost
accounting these are the maximum set of
remedies
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8appropriate obligations are
- objective, transparent, proportionate and
non-discriminatory - specific to the problem, proportionate and
maintained only for as long as necessary - only in absence of effective competition
- only when competition rules insufficient
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9 ERG remedy principles
- reasoned decisions
- non-relicable infrastructure - sufficient access
to wholesale inputs to protect consumers - replicable infrastructure supporting feasible
investment to assist transition to sustainable
competition - incentive compatibility
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10 Markets susceptible to regulation
three cumulative conditions high durable
barriers to entry, lack of dynamic competition,
insufficiency of competition law remedies.
criteria for identifying markets for the purpose
of the new regulatory framework should include an
overall assessment of the effectiveness of
competition law in addressing the market failures
concerned. Ex. Memo, 9. ERG claims that three
criteria used to identify 18 markets, and NOT
required in NRAs assessment NOT TRUE
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11Legal complementarity elsewhere?
- Telia/Telenor ECC says can ignore competition
regulatory laws - Tetra Laval CFI/ECJ says must take antitrust
into account - NRF must take antitrust into account and takes
precedence over SR? - Trenko US Supreme Crt takes hardline that no
right to access in antitrust cf Magill, Bronner,
IMS, Microsoft - double jeopardy
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12Market definition issues
- cellophane fallacy
- fixed costs high fixed/low marginal/avoidable
costs - retail/wholesale distinction
- supply-side substitutability/endogenous sunk
costs - network effects
- aggregation/bundling
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13Emerging market exception
safe harbour where market leadership due to
FMA in emerging market Art 14(3) FD - leveraging
into non-regulated emerging market to be dealt
with by Art. 82 Emerging market immature,
innovation-driven, distinct from regulated market
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14Are the triggers different?
- SMP defined as lack of effective competition
- dominance ability to act independently to
impede effective competition - focus on leveraging defunct theory/exceptional
use - different concepts of effective competition
protecting competitors, v dynamic
competition/competition as efficiency However
Access Notice - passing ships in the night! modernisation
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15Failure of competition law access
- EC Telecommunication Notice Access Notice
- rise fall of essential facility
doctrine/refusal to supply - Bronner - ECJ slap down
- Commissions new economy theories
- protecting competitors (aka entry assistance) v
protecting competition
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16Confusion over access/refusal to supply
- no conception of competitive harm competitor
welfare vs consumer surplus or total surplus! - no adequate concept of efficient access
- caselaw/regulatory decisions set out rudiments eg
price squeeze cases Access Notice - balance asset holders interests against consumers
based on whether access generates incremental
consumer gains investment (dis)incentive
effects.
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17efficient obligations are
- regulation and remedies which minimise social
costs - the sum of primary regulatory costs (
enforcement compliance error costs) - no recognition of this consideration
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18Is there a real difference?
- legal convergence - one approach two laws!
- same objectives?
- same substantive evidentiary standards?
- same public enforcement?
- same remedies?
- same reviewability
- same outcome?
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19Possible rationale for sectoral regulation
- NRF has wider goals dynamic competition/efficien
cy? but efficiency limited to investment
spectrum use - does ex ante/ex post distinction make sense?
- differences in enforcement costs/effectiveness
NRF cheaper, easier and nastier (cite Oftel views
that competition case too hard to mount) - permanent problems require durable solutions
but regulation in constant flux! - or the distinction between reactive v proactive
intervention
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20 Are remedies different?
- with exception of price controls identical
- increasingly use of behavioural remedies by
Commission under ECMR - what is difference
between Vodafone/Mannesmann undertaking and NRF
(despite EC Merger Remedies Guidelines) - are there other considerations? verification,
detectability
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21Further reading
- EC Antitrust in the New Economy Is the European
Commissions View of the Network Economy Right?
European Competition Law Review, 2001. - Regulating with Competition Law Why the
proposed use of dominance to trigger EC telecom
regulation is flawed, LINK, 2001
www.casecon.com/data/pdfs/regulatingwithcompetitio
n.pdf - Remedies under the New EU Regulation of the
Communications Sector, Report prepared for ETNO,
2003. www.casecon.com/data/pdfs/ETNOfinalreport
.pdf - Price Squeezes, Foreclosure and Competition Law -
Principles and Guidelines, Journal of Network
Industries (2003) www.casecon.com/data/pdfs/pri
cesqueeze.pdf - Regulation versus Antitrust - Gaps on the New EC
Regulation of the Communications Sector , World
Internet Law Report, 2004. www.casecon.com/data/
pdfs/WILR2004.pdf
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22CASE - competition economists
Case Associates provide economic analysis in
competition law and regulatory investigations,
and act as expert witnesses in litigation and
arbitrations. Case use rigorous economic and
quantitative techniques to address the critical
issues and marshal evidence to define relevant
markets, respond to allegations of monopoly abuse
and anti-competitive practices, and evaluate the
competitive impact of mergers. Case, have
provided expert reports to regulatory bodies in
the UK, European Community, USA and Australia, on
a wide range of issues in many different
sectors.
market definition dominance/SMP vertical
restraints/price squeezes cartels/price fixing,
mergers litigation/arbitration sectoral
regulation
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