Did the European Union’s Market Dominance Policy Have a Gap? Evidence from Enforcement in the United States

36 Pages Posted: 30 May 2009 Last revised: 2 Oct 2009

Date Written: September 29, 2009

Abstract

The European Union (EU) and the United States (US) enforce the world’s two best known merger policies. The EU addresses transactions that are likely to impede effective competition, historically, with some type of dominance analysis, while the US focuses on mergers that are likely to substantially lessen competition, using either a unilateral effects or coordinated interaction (collusion) analysis. Although EU regulators identified a gap in their policy relative to the US regime, it is unclear if the gap is material. This paper uses simulation analysis and a review of a sample of US merger analyses to show the EU gap is relatively small and limited to collusion analysis. Policy differences, due to regime-specific enforcement standards, remain possible, because the gap only alleged a difference in safe harbor policies.

Keywords: merger policy, market dominance, unilateral effects, antitrust, merger gap

JEL Classification: K21, l4

Suggested Citation

Coate, Malcolm B., Did the European Union’s Market Dominance Policy Have a Gap? Evidence from Enforcement in the United States (September 29, 2009). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1410246 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1410246

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