Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Table of cases
- Table of legislation
- 1 Competition law: policy perspectives
- 2 The core values of EC competition law in flux
- 3 Economics and competition law
- 4 Competition law and public policy
- 5 Market power
- 6 Abuse of a dominant position: anticompetitive exclusion
- 7 Abuse of a dominant position: from competition policy to sector-specific regulation
- 8 Merger policy
- 9 Oligopoly markets
- 10 Distribution agreements
- 11 Institutions: who enforces competition law?
- 12 Competition law and liberalisation
- 13 Conclusions
- Index
12 - Competition law and liberalisation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Table of cases
- Table of legislation
- 1 Competition law: policy perspectives
- 2 The core values of EC competition law in flux
- 3 Economics and competition law
- 4 Competition law and public policy
- 5 Market power
- 6 Abuse of a dominant position: anticompetitive exclusion
- 7 Abuse of a dominant position: from competition policy to sector-specific regulation
- 8 Merger policy
- 9 Oligopoly markets
- 10 Distribution agreements
- 11 Institutions: who enforces competition law?
- 12 Competition law and liberalisation
- 13 Conclusions
- Index
Summary
Introduction
In the 1980s, states began to relinquish control in a number of economic sectors that had been under their ownership since at least the post-war era (e.g. telecommunications, energy, transport, postal services). For economic reasons (the industries were considered natural monopolies) and/or political considerations (the industries provided public services that all should have a right to as citizens, not as consumers) competition was excluded and in many countries the industries operated as a single, vertically integrated, state-owned monopoly. However, state monopolies were called into question by three considerations: economic (increasing dissatisfaction with the performance of these sectors under state management and an understanding that competition could inject greater efficiency), technological (innovations weakened the natural monopoly argument) and political (a shift in the conception of the role of the state, perhaps best encapsulated by the catchphrase ‘rolling back the state’). Today, the provision of public services does not allow one to make a prima facie case for excluding competition. Instead ‘[t]he traditional approach to public life, based on stewardship and public duty, has been replaced by a market-oriented approach to the delivery of public goods and services’. One useful way to describe the changed relationship between the state and newly liberalised industries is to deploy the concept of the regulatory state.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- EC Competition Law , pp. 440 - 496Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007