Cover image for Competition policy and regulation : recent developments in China, the US and Europe
Title:
Competition policy and regulation : recent developments in China, the US and Europe
Publication Information:
Cheltenham, UK ; Northampton, MA : Edward Elgar, c2011
Physical Description:
x ii, 354 p. : ill. ; 25 cm.
ISBN:
9781849800754

Available:*

Library
Item Barcode
Call Number
Material Type
Item Category 1
Status
Searching...
30000010281073 KNQ3242 C66 2011 Open Access Book Book
Searching...

On Order

Summary

Summary

This unique book considers competition policy and regulation in light of the recent introduction of the anti-monopoly law in China. It addresses the relevance of competition policy for China from a broad theoretical and practical perspective, bringing together lawyers and economists from China, Europe and the US to provide an integrated law and economics approach.

Given that the development of the Chinese anti-monopoly law in China was heavily reliant on a comparative approach, the contributors analyze how its text and practice actually compare to European and US legislation. The first cases in which Chinese anti-monopoly law were applied are explored, and both competition law and competition policy are discussed in detail. Topics include: industrial and professional regulation and their relationship to competition law, merger control, substantive competition law issues, cartels, and abuse of dominance and predation.

This unique book will prove a fascinating read for competition lawyers, economists with a special interest in regulation and competition, and for practitioners concerned with competition policy and regulation.

Contributors include: L.A. Andres, F.-L. Chen, M. Faure, R. Gilbert, J.L. Guasch, Y. Huang, R. Pardolesi, N. Philipsen, D. Rubinfeld, T. Ulen, R. Van den Bergh, S. Weishaar, D. Yu, L. Yu, V. Zhang, X. Zhang, Z. Zhang


Author Notes

Edited by Michael Faure, Professor, Maastricht University and Erasmus School of Law, the Netherlands and Chairman of the Flemish High Council of Environmental Enforcement (VHRM), Brussels, Belgium and Xinzhu Zhang, Professor of Economics, Jiangxi University of Finance and Economics, Shanghai University of Finance and Economics and Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, China