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The Internationalization of Antitrust Enforcement
Spencer Weber Waller Loyola University Chicago School of Law Boston University Law Review, Vol. 77, p. 343, 1997 Abstract: This article analyzes past efforts to create an internatiional competition law system and then suggests a modest approach toward instituting such a system. Part I discusses both the failed attempts to achieve a true international or harmonized competition law and the greater success of regional efforts. Part II discusses the limited success of antitrust cooperation on a multilateral and explores the more successful regional and bilateral cooperation agreements. Part III examines the governmental, business, and institutional pressures for and against further harmonization or cooperation. Part IV suggests three scenarios under which harmonization and the creation of international antitrust rules are most likely to succeed. Finally, Part V advoctaes the modest goal of an international competiton system that requires each nation to have an effective competition law and to enforce it in a non-discriminatory manner, comporting with existing standards of national and most-favored nation treatment as those terms are understod in international economic law.
Keywords: antitrust, harmonization, cooperation, international antitrust, international trade, World Trade Organization JEL Classifications: K21, l40, F02, F13 Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: January 12, 2007 ; Last revised: June 24, 2009Suggested CitationContact Information
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