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Economic of European Integration Prof. Giovanni Graziani Introduction

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Title: Economic of European Integration Prof. Giovanni Graziani Introduction


1

EU Competition Policy
Michele Colucci ISDE-JMLS Barcelona June
2-4,2009 Email info_at_colucci.eu Web site
www.colucci.eu
2

PRINCIPLES
Art. 2 EC COMMON MARKET HIGH DEGREE OF
COMPETITIVENESS
3

EU Competition Policy
Legal basis Rules applying to
undertakings Art. 81 EC Art. 82 EC State
aids Art. 86 EC Art. 87 EC
4
EU Competition Policy
  • Four main forms of restriction of competition
  • Agreements between companies (Art. 81)
  • Abuse of dominant position (Art. 82)
  • Mergers (Regulation 139/2004)
  • State aids

5
Art. 81.1
  • Art. 81.1
  • The following shall be prohibited as incompatible
    with the common market all agreements 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, and in particular those which
  • directly or indirectly fix purchase or selling
    prices or any other trading conditions
  • (b) limit or control production, markets,
    technical development, or investment
  • (c) share markets or sources of supply
  • (d) apply dissimilar conditions to equivalent
    transactions with other trading parties, thereby
    placing them at a competitive disadvantage
  • (e) make the conclusion of contracts subject to
    acceptance by the other parties of supplementary
    obligations which, by their nature or according
    to commercial usage, have no connection with the
    subject of such contracts.

6
Art. 81.1
LEGAL ANALYSIS
SUBSTANTIAL ANALYSIS
7
LEGAL ANALYSIS
  • DEFINITION OF TRADE
  • NEUTRALITY
  • APPRECIABILITY

8
Art. 81.1
  • LEGAL ANALYSIS
  • 1. Definition of TRADE (Point 19 Commission
    Notice 2004/C 101/07)
  • The concept of trade is not limited to
    traditional exchanges of goods and services
    across borders. It is a wider concept, covering
    all cross-border economic activity including
    establishment.

9
Art. 81.1
  • Legal ANALYSIS
  • 2. MAY AFFECT (Point 23 Commission Notice 2004/C
    101/07)
  • the notion may affect implies that must be
    possible to foresee with a sufficient degree of
    probability on the basis of a set of objective
    factors of law or fact that the agreement or
    practice may have an influence, direct or
    indirect, actual or potential, on the pattern of
    trade between Member States

10
Art. 81.1
  • Legal ANALYSIS
  • 3. NEUTRALITY (Point 34 Commission Notice
    2004/C 101/07)
  • The term pattern of trade is neutral. It is
    not a condition that trade be restricted or
    reduced. Patterns of trade can also be affected
    when an agreement or practice causes an increase
    in trade.

11
Art. 81.1
  • LEGAL ANALYSIS
  • 4. APPRECIABILITY (Point 44 Commission Notice
    2004/C 101/07)
  • The effect on trade criterion incorporates a
    quantitative element, limiting Community law
    jurisdiction to agreements and practices that are
    capable of having effects of a certain magnitude.
    Agreements and practices fall outside the scope
    of application of Article 81 and 82 when they
    affect the market only insignificantly having
    regard to the weak position of the undertakings
    concerned on the market for the products in
    question. Appreciability can be appraised in
    particular by reference to the position and the
    importance of the relevant undertakings on the
    market for the products concerned

12
Art. 81.1
  • LEGAL ANALYSIS
  • 4. APPRECIABILITY (Point 52 Commission Notice
    2004/C 101/07)
  • Agreements are not capable of appreciably
    affecting trade between Member States when 2
    conditions are both met
  • a. If the aggregate market share of the parties
    to the agreement is less than 5,
  • b. Horizontal Agreements aggregate annual
    turnover of the undertakings does not exceed 40
    Million Euro
  • Vertical Agreements aggregate annual
    Community turnover of the supplier does not
    exceed 40 Million euro

13
Art. 81.1
  • SUBSTANTIAL ANALYSIS
  • Impact on Competition
  • Object (contained in art. 81.1)
  • De Minimis (Commission Notice on Agreements of
    minor importance)
  • Paragraph 7 H. A. 10 Market Share
  • Paragraph 7 V. A. 15 Market Share (Aggregate)

14
Art. 81.3
INDIVIDUAL EXEMPTION
BLOCK (OR GROUP) EXEMPTION
15
Art. 81.3
  • The Art.81.3 exception only refers to that
    behavior which falls within Art.81.1. This is a
    fundamental point.
  • Art. 81.3
  • The provisions of paragraph 1 may, however, be
    declared inapplicable in the case of
  • - any agreement or category of agreements between
    undertakings,
  • - any decision or category of decisions by
    associations of undertakings,
  • - any concerted practice or category of concerted
    practices,
  • which contributes to improving the production or
    distribution of goods or to promoting technical
    or economic progress, while allowing consumers a
    fair share of the resulting benefit, and
  • which does not
  • (a) impose on the undertakings concerned
    restrictions which are not indispensable to the
  • attainment of these objectives
  • (b) afford such undertakings the possibility of
    eliminating competition in respect of a
  • substantial part of the products in question.

16
Art. 81.3
  • INDIVIDUAL EXEMPTION
  • 4 Cumulative conditions
  • Positive Conditions
  • 1. Economic Benefits
  • 2. Fair Share for Consumers
  • Negative Conditions
  • 3. Indispensability
  • 4. Enough competition in the market

17
Art. 81.3
  • INDIVIDUAL EXEMPTION
  • Positive conditions
  • 1. Economic Benefits
  • a. Improving Production or
  • b. Improving distribution or
  • c. Promoting technical progress or
  • d. Promoting economical progress
  • N.B. These 4 conditions are alterantives, while
    the previuos 4 are cumulatives
  • 2. Fair share for consumers

18
Art. 81.3
  • INDIVIDUAL EXEMPTION
  • Negative Conditions
  • 3. Indispensability
  • does not impose on the undertakings
    concerned restrictions which are not
    indispensable to the attainment of these
    objectives (referred to in the first condition.

19
Art. 81.3
  • INDIVIDUAL EXEMPTION
  • Negative Conditions
  • 4. No Restriction of Competition
  • which does not afford such undertakings
    (which are party to the agreement) the
    possibility of eliminating competition in respect
    of a substantial part of the products in
    question.

20
Block Exemption
  • Comm. Regulation 2790/1999 Vertical Agreements
  • This regulation is the concrete application of
    the new approach to vertical agreements and it is
    the first group exemption of the new generation
  • Instead of indicating the clauses of vertical
    agreements which would benefit the exempion, the
    Commission decided to indicate only the clauses
    which would prevent the exemption and would
    permit the rest.
  • White list

Black List
21
Block Exemption
  • Comm. Regulation 2790/1999 Vertical Agreements
  • For a V.A. to be caught by the Art. 81.3
    exemption, it must fulfill 2 conditions
    cumulatively, found in Art. 3.1 and Art. 4 of the
    Regulation
  • Market share held by the supplier does not exceed
    30 of the relevant market on which it sells the
    contract goods or services
  • The agreement does not contain a clause which
    lays down a restriction of the type mentioned in
    the black list of art. 4 (No Hardcore
    Restriction)

22
Block Exemption
  • Hardcore Restrictions for Vertical Agreements
  • Art. 4 Commission Regulation n. 2790/1999
  • Price fixing
  • Territorial Restriction
  • Restriction to sell to end users
  • Restriction of Cross- supplies
  • Components and spare parts restriction

23
Block Exemption
  • Hardcore Restrictions for Vertical Agreements
  • Art. 11 De Minimis Notice
  • Art. 4 Commission Regulation n. 2790/1999

24
Block Exemption
  • Active Sales
  • Approaching individuals customers by direct mail
    or visit or actively approaching in a specific
    territory a customer by establishing a warehouse
    or a distribution outlet
  • Passive Sales
  • Responding to unsolicited request from individual
    customers including delivery of goods or services
    to such customers

25
Block Exemption
  • Hardcore Restrictions for Vertical Agreements
  • Art. 4 Commission Regulation n. 2790/1999
  • 2. Market Sharing
  • Not possible the restriction of the
    territory but
  • 2.1 Possible restriction of Active Sales
    (paragraph 50 guidelines)
  • 2.2 Possible restriction of Active and Passive
    Sales to end users by the wholesaler
  • 2.3 Selective Distribution
  • 2.4 Possible restriction to sell componets to
    costumers who would use them to manifacture the
    same type of goods

26
ABUSE OF DOMINANT POSITION
  • ART. 82 EC
  • Any abuse by one or more undertakings of a
    dominant position within the common market or in
    a substantial part of it shall be prohibited as
    incompatible with the common market in so far as
    it may affect trade between Member States.

27
ABUSE OF DOMINANT POSITION
  • Such abuse may, in particular, consist in
  • (a) directly or indirectly imposing unfair
    purchase or selling prices or other unfair
    trading conditions
  • (b) limiting production, markets or technical
    development to the prejudice of consumers
  • (c) applying dissimilar conditions to equivalent
    transactions with other trading parties, thereby
    placing them at a competitive disadvantage
  • (d) making the conclusion of contracts subject to
    acceptance by the other parties of supplementary
    obligations which, by their nature or according
    to commercial usage, have no connection with the
    subject of such contracts.

28
MARKET
  • GEOGRAPHICAL MARKET
  • PRODUCT MARKET

29
Fields of application in Sport
  • Transfer rules
  • Sale of tickets
  • Broadcasting rights
  • Monopoly of federations
  • Multi-ownership of clubs

30
BASIC PRINCIPLES OF EC LAW
  • EC law applies to Sport in so far it constitutes
    an economic activity (ECJ case law)
  • No Activities purely social, artistic or
    sporting ......
  • but then MECA MEDICA judgement of 18 July
    2006...
  • Test of Necessity
  • Test of Proportionality

31
The Legal Methodology in the Meca Medina case
  • STEP 1 Are the EC anti-trust rules, i.e.
    Articles 81 and/or Art. 82 applicable to Sporting
    rules?
  • STEP 2 If EC anti-trust rules are applicable,
    does the sporting rule fall outside the
    prohibition of Articles 81 (1) and 82?
  • STEP 3 Can the rule be considered compatible
    with EC anti-trust rules because it fulfils the
    conditions of Article 81(3) EC or because of an
    objective justification under Article 82 EC?

32
STEP 1
  • 1. Is the sports association that adopted the
    rule in question an undertaking or
    anassociation of undertakings?
  • a. The sports association is an undertaking to
    the extent it carries out an economic activity
    itself (e.g., the selling of broadcasting
    rights).
  • b. The sports association is an association of
    undertakings if its members carry out an
    economic activity.
  • If no economic activity, Articles 81 and 82 do
    not apply
  • Is trade between MS affected (geographical
    market, production market, Community
    interest...)?

33
STEP 2
  • Compatibility of rules with the Community rules
    on competition cannot be assessed in the
    abstract.
  • Taking into account
  • the overall context in which the decision of
    the association of undertakings was taken or
    produces its effects.
  • Its objectives measures inherent in the pursuit
    of those objectives and proportionate to them.
  • Proportionality of measures (quid sportive
    sanctions?)

34
STEP 3
  • Can the rule be considered compatible with EC
    anti-trust rules because it fulfils the
    conditions of Article 81(3) EC or because of an
    objective justification under Article 82 EC?
  • Case by case approach
  • No General sports exception!

35
Sporting rules that are more likely to comply
with Art. 81 and Art. 82 EC
  • Selection criteria for sport competition
  • At home and away rules
  • Transfer periods
  • Nationality clauses for national teams
  • Rules prohibiting the multiple ownership of clubs
  • Antidoping rules
  • Rules of the game

36
Sporting rules that are less likely to comply
with Articles 81 and 82 EC
  • Rules regulating professions ancillary to sport
  • Rules excluding legal challenges of sports awards
    before ordinary Courts
  • Rules limiting the number of foreign players
  • Rules requiring transfer payments for players at
    the end of their contracts

37
CONCLUSIONS
  • ALL ROADS LEAD TO ROME BUT FIRST....
  • THEY GO THROUGH BRUSSELS!
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