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Defying Conventional Wisdom: The Case for Private Antitrust Enforcement

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TLDR
In this article, the authors show that private enforcement provides important and beneficial compensation and deterrence, although the level of both is likely suboptimal, and that it is highly unlikely private enforcement produces excessive compensation or deterrence.
Abstract
The conventional wisdom is that private antitrust enforcement lacks any value. Indeed, skepticism of private enforcement has been so great that its critics make contradictory claims. The first major line of criticism is that private enforcement achieves too little — it does not even minimally compensate the actual victims of antitrust violations and does not significantly deter those violations. A second line of criticism contends that private enforcement achieves too much — providing excessive compensation, often to the wrong parties, and producing overdeterrence. This article undertakes the first ever systematic evaluation of these claims. Building upon original empirical work and theoretical inquiry by the authors, and an assessment of the specific factual bases of the criticisms, the article demonstrates that private enforcement provides important and beneficial compensation and deterrence, although the level of both is likely suboptimal. Moreover, the article shows it is highly unlikely that private enforcement produces excessive compensation or deterrence. The article concludes that private enforcement should be strengthened and explores some implications of this conclusion.

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Legalism without adversarialism?: Bureaucratic legalism and the politics of regulatory implementation in the European Union

TL;DR: The authors empirically assess the Eurolegalism thesis by examining EU regulatory mandates in the competition and securities fields, two policy areas where adversarial legalism is seen as most likely to develop.
References
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Has the European Commission Become More Severe in Punishing Cartels? Effects of the 2006 Guidelines

TL;DR: In this article, the first 13 cartel decisions of the European Commission under its 2006 revised fining guidelines are analyzed and it is shown that the severity of the cartel fines is more than five times higher than those figured under the previous 1998 Guidelines.

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission Immunity Policy for Cartel Conduct: A Critical Legal Analysis

TL;DR: The United States Corporate Leniency Policy Incarnate (CLPLP) was created by the American Chamber of Commerce of Commerce and the United States Chamber of Deputies (CDPP).
Journal ArticleDOI

Power to the people: enhancing competition law enforcement in Indonesia through private enforcement

TL;DR: For nearly two decades, public enforcement through the Indonesian Competition Authority has been the fulcrum of Indonesia's competition law enforcement as discussed by the authors, however, they fail to provide effect and are ineffective.
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