Antitrust Fines and Managerial Liability
Forthcoming in Florence Thépot and Anna Tzanaki (eds), Research Handbook on Competition and Corporate Law (Edward Elgar 2024)
Discussion Paper Series – CRC TR 224
42 Pages Posted: 25 May 2023 Last revised: 30 Nov 2023
There are 2 versions of this paper
Antitrust Fines and Managerial Liability
Management Liability for Companies’ Antitrust Fines
Date Written: May 24, 2023
Abstract
If an antitrust fine has been imposed on a company, the question of managerial recourse liability arises. We present court cases from the Netherlands, the UK, and Germany, in part denying managerial liability and claiming that it would undermine the fines’ deterrent effect. We analyse whether managerial liability should be limited or banned to prevent, on the one hand, the company or its shareholders being under-deterred or, on the other hand, the company’s management being over-deterred. Regarding the former, we argue that a ban of managerial liability – which would have to be accompanied by a ban on any other type of internal financial sanction – would take an indispensable governance instrument out of the hands of shareholders. This holds true despite the availability of D&O insurance. Regarding the latter, we identify risks of overdeterrence but also see mitigating mechanisms at work. We conclude that, while a restriction on managerial liability may be regarded a reasonable measure, this should be viewed as lying within the discretion of company law legislation and jurisprudence but not as a mandatory implication of antitrust fining laws.
Keywords: antitrust law, cartels, antitrust fines, deterrence, managerial liability, antitrust compliance, D&O insurance, EU law, principle of effectiveness
JEL Classification: K21, K22, K42, L40
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation