Des critères d'application de la théorie des facilités essentielles dans le cadre de la politique de concurrence européenne
Frédéric Marty and
Julien Pillot ()
Reflets et perspectives de la vie économique, 2011, vol. L, issue 4, 197-221
Abstract:
The essential facilities doctrine (EFD) involves antitrust liability for a dominant firm, when an access refusal to one of its asset could exclude an actual or a potential competitor from the market. First used for network industries? infrastructures, the EFD was progressively extended to intangible assets, as intellectual property rights, as Magill, IMS or Microsoft cases show it. The European practices sharply contrast with US Antitrust positions. Mandatory access decisions could induce significant adverse effects on investment incentives for both dominant firm and its competitors. In order to assess such risks, we analyzed in this paper the criteria used in the European competition case law. We highlight the potential consequences of their ambiguity and their subsequent plasticity. We consider that such characteristics could be both analyzed in terms of legal uncertainty, in terms of legal resources for corporate strategies or in terms of additional room for competition authorities? discretional interventions
Date: 2011
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Working Paper: Des critères d'application de la théorie des facilités essentielles dans le cadre de la politique de concurrence européenne (2011)
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