Competition
Law
                    COMPETITION LAWS STATUTES
             US                           UK                              India
Sherman Act, 1890            The Monopolies & Restrictive MRTP Act, 1969
                             Practices (Inquiry & Control)
                             Act, 1948
Clayton Act, 1914            The Restrictive Trade            Competition Act, 2002
                             Practices Act 1956
The Federal Trade            Monopolies and Mergers           The Competition (Amendment)
Commission Act, 1914         Act 1965                         Act, 2007
Robinson-Patman Act, 1936    Competition Act, 1998            The Competition (Amendment)
                                                              Act, 2009
Celler-Kefauver Act ,1950    Enterprise Act, 2002             The Competition (Amendment)
                                                              Bill, 2020
The Hart-Scott-Rodino
Antitrust Improvements Act
of 1976
Foreign Trade Anti-trust     Protection of Trading Interest   S. 32 of Competition Act, 2002
Improvement Act, 1982        Act, 1980
  COMPARING IMPORTANT SECTIONS UNDER THE
                  ACTS
                          India           US                 UK
Anti-competitiv   S. 3 of          S.1 of Sherman    S. 2 of
e agreements      Competition Act, Act, 1890         Competition Act,
                  2002                               1998
Abuse of          S. 4             S.2 of Sherman    S. 18
Dominance                          Act, 1890
Combinations      S. 5 & 6         S. 7 Regulation   OFT investigates
                                   of Clayton Act,   mergers under
                                   1914.             Fair Trading Act,
                                                     1973.
Investigation     S. 19                              Ch. III (S. 25-41)
                  During           ‘Rule of Reason   ‘Rule of Reason
                  investigation    Analysis is       Analysis is
                  ‘Balanced        Followed’         Followed’
                  Assessment’ is
                  looked into
       Regarding Anti-trust Laws
⚫ Many consumers have never heard of antitrust laws, but enforcement
    of these laws saves consumers millions and even billions of dollars a
    year. The Federal Government enforces three major Federal antitrust
    laws, and most states also have their own. Essentially, these laws
    prohibit business practices that unreasonably deprive consumers of
    the benefits of competition, resulting in higher prices for products
    and services.
⚫   The three major Federal antitrust laws are:
⚫   The Sherman Antitrust Act
⚫   The Clayton Act
⚫   The Federal Trade Commission Act.
⚫   The following information on these laws comes from the Antitrust
    Enforcement and the Consumer guide.
The Sherman Antitrust Act
⚫ This Act outlaws all contracts, combinations, and conspiracies
  that unreasonably restrain interstate and foreign trade. This
  includes agreements among competitors to fix prices, rig bids,
  and allocate customers, which are punishable as criminal
  felonies.
⚫ The Sherman Act also makes it a crime to monopolize any part
  of interstate commerce. An unlawful monopoly exists when
  one firm controls the market for a product or service, and it has
  obtained that market power, not because its product or service
  is superior to others, but by suppressing competition with
  anticompetitive conduct.
⚫ The Act, however, is not violated simply when one firm's
  vigorous competition and lower prices take sales from its less
  efficient competitors; in that case, competition is working
  properly.
The Clayton Act
⚫ This Act is a civil statute (carrying no criminal penalties)
  that prohibits mergers or acquisitions that are likely to
  lessen competition. Under this Act, the Government
  challenges those mergers that are likely to increase prices
  to consumers. All persons considering a merger or
  acquisition above a certain size must notify both the
  Antitrust Division and the Federal Trade Commission.
  The Act also prohibits other business practices that may
  harm competition under certain circumstances.
  The Federal Trade Commission Act & Related
                   Offences
⚫ This Act prohibits unfair methods of competition in interstate
  commerce, but carries no criminal penalties. It also created the
  Federal Trade Commission to police violations of the Act.
⚫ The Antitrust Division also often uses other laws to fight
  illegal activities that arise from conduct accompanying antitrust
  violations or that otherwise impact the competitive process, as
  well as offenses that involve the integrity of an antitrust or
  related investigation, including laws that prohibit false
  statements to Federal agencies, perjury, obstruction of justice,
  conspiracies to defraud the United States and mail and wire
  fraud. Each of these crimes carries its own fine and
  imprisonment term, which may be added to the fines and
  imprisonment terms for antitrust law violations.
US – Antitrust Law
• Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1
      Prohibits contracts, combinations and conspiracies in restraint of
      trade.
      The Supreme Court has interpreted the Sherman Act to only
      prohibit “unreasonable” restraints of trade. Determining what is
      unreasonable typically is a complex, granular exercise deeply
      impacted by economic analysis.
      Certain agreements, however, are per se illegal without any
      further analysis. It is generally per se illegal when competitors
      engage in price fixing, division of markets, bid rigging or group
      boycotts.
US – Antitrust Law Penalties
• Criminal Penalties (Imposed by Sherman Act)
       Up to 10 years in prison for individuals
       Criminal fines of up to $100 Million for corporations or twice the
       loss/gain from the violation (whichever is greater)
       Criminal fines of up to $1 Million for individuals or twice the
       loss/gain from the violation (whichever is greater)
• Civil Penalties
       Treble damages available to a successful plaintiff
       Payment of the plaintiff’s attorneys’ fees and costs (on top of
       your own attorneys’ fees)
       Joint and several liability
⚫ The Federal Trade Commission Act bans "unfair methods
  of competition" and "unfair or deceptive acts or practices."
  The Supreme Court has said that all violations of the
  Sherman Act also violate the FTC Act. Thus, although the
  FTC does not technically enforce the Sherman Act, it can
  bring cases under the FTC Act against the same kinds of
  activities that violate the Sherman Act. The FTC Act also
  reaches other practices that harm competition, but that
  may not fit neatly into categories of conduct formally
  prohibited by the Sherman Act. Only the FTC brings cases
  under the FTC Act.
⚫ The Clayton Act addresses specific practices that the Sherman
  Act does not clearly prohibit, such as mergers and interlocking
  directorates (that is, the same person making business decisions
  for competing companies). Section 7 of the Clayton Act
  prohibits mergers and acquisitions where the effect "may be
  substantially to lessen competition, or to tend to create a
  monopoly." As amended by the Robinson-Patman Act of 1936,
  the Clayton Act also bans certain discriminatory prices,
  services, and allowances in dealings between merchants. The
  Clayton Act was amended again in 1976 by the
  Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements Act to require
  companies planning large mergers or acquisitions to notify the
  government of their plans in advance. The Clayton Act also
  authorizes private parties to sue for triple damages when they
  have been harmed by conduct that violates either the Sherman
  or Clayton Act and to obtain a court order prohibiting the
  anticompetitive practice in the future.
The Basics – EU Competition Law
• Article 101(1) TFEU prohibits agreements whose
 object or effect is the prevention, distortion or
 restriction of competition and which appreciably
 affects competition and trade between Member States
• Agreements/concerted practices
• Restrictions by object or effect
• Must appreciably affect       competition   and   trade
 between member states
• Article 101(3) individual exemption
• If an information exchange contributes to improving products and distribution or promotes
    technical and economic progress while sharing benefits with consumers can be granted an
    individual exemption
• Examples of pro-competitive information exchange
• Various Block Exemption Regulations: R&D, technology transfer agreement, specialisation
 • Horizontal Co-operation Agreement Guidelines
⚫ Domestic Competition Law
 • Member States have their own competition laws modelled on the EU laws
•    This law applies where the competitive effect of the arrangement is purely domestic
⚫ Relevant Authorities
 • The EU Commission is primarily responsible for enforcing EU competition law
•    Member States competition authorities enforce domestic competition law but also enforce EU
     competition law in association with the EU Commission.
Key Changes in Competition Bill 2022
⚫ A board with part-time members to supervise CCI activities.
⚫ This would bring its regulatory architecture at par with that of financial
    regulators.
⚫   CCI to mandatorily issue penalty guidelines and give reasons in case of any
    divergence.
⚫   It will give much-needed certainty in regulatory environment
⚫   CCI could engage in structured negotiations with parties and arrive at
    mutually-workable solutions without having to go through lengthy formal
    proceedings.
⚫   This will bring powers of CCI on par with Sebi, which has been passing
    settlement orders for over a decade.
⚫   Previously CCI was only empowered to take action for abuse of dominance
    or anti-competitive agreements in the form of final orders in proceedings
    before it.
⚫   CCI can make appeals to the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal
    conditional on a pre-deposit of up to 25% of the penalty imposed by the
    CCI.
⚫ Shortening of the merger review period from 210 to 150 days
⚫ Introduction of a green channel for merger applications: Certain categories
  of mergers that had to wait for CCI approval would be allowed to attain full
  consummation without any standstill obligation under the new
  green-channel process.
⚫ Previously, only those agreements are allowed if agreements made between
  businesses at the same level of production (such as competitors that form a
  cartel) or businesses that are in a directly upstream or downstream market
  (such as agreements between a manufacturer and distributor).
⚫ If the parties do not fall in either of these brackets, anti-competitive
  agreements between them can go unchecked.
⚫ But the bill also recognizes other forms of cartels such as hub-and-spoke
  cartels, it also has a catch-all provision to enable the CCI to deal with
  anti-competitive pacts irrespective of the structural relationships between
  parties.
          IPR and Competition Law
⚫ Broadly, IPRs-related competition issues include:
⚫ Exclusionary terms in the licensing of IPRs, specifically the
    inclusion in licensing contracts of restrictive clauses such as
    territorial restraints,
⚫   exclusive dealing arrangements, tying or grant-back
    requirements.
⚫   Use of IPRs to reinforce or extend the abuse of dominant
    position on the market, unlawfully;
⚫   IPRs as an element of mergers and cooperative arrangements;
    and
⚫   Refusal to deal.
⚫   Compulsory license and parallel imports, however, remain
    debatable issues which lie on the delicate interface between
    IPRs policy and competition rules.
⚫ Innovators or IPRs holders are rewarded with a temporary
  monopoly by the law to recoup the costs incurred in the
  research and innovation process. As a result, IPRs holders earn
  rightful and reasonable profits, so that they have incentives to
  engage in further innovation.
⚫ Competition law, on the other hand, has always been regarded
  by most as essential mechanism in curbing market distortions,
  disciplining anticompetitive practices, preventing monopoly
  and abuse of monopoly, inducing optimum allocation of
  resources and benefiting consumers with fair prices, wider
  choices and better qualities. It, therefore, ensures that the
  monopolistic power associated with IPRs is not excessively
  compounded or leveraged and extended to the detriment of
  competition.
     Framing the Competition-IPRs
             Relationship
⚫ Only when alternative technologies are not available,11 IPRs can be
  said to grant their holders monopolistic positions in the defined
  relevant markets. And even then that alone does not create an
  antitrust violation. Antitrust/ competition law recognises that an
  IPR.s creation of monopoly power can be necessary to achieve a
  greater gain for consumers. Moreover, antitrust/ competition law
  does not outlaw monopoly in all circumstances. For example,
  monopoly achieved solely with .superior skill, foresight, and
  industry does not violate the antitrust/competition law. It is only
  when monopoly is acquired or maintained, or extended through
  unlawfully anti-competitive means that it can be ruled unlawful
⚫ From a theoretical perspective, IP is a quid pro quo for competition.
HUB-AND-SPOKE ARRANGEMENTS
⚫ In the current competition law regime, the investigations to prove the
   presence of a cartel arrangement focuses heavily on determining the
   presence of collusion either at a horizontal level or at a vertical level. This
   leads to a difficulty in dealing with what is popularly known as
   “hub-and-spoke arrangements,” which operate in the form of a hybrid of
   the horizontal and vertical arrangements. Hub-and-spoke agreements
   operate through the coming together of actors operating at one horizontal
   level of the economic process (the spokes) controlled through a common
   agent operating at a different level (the hub), thus creating a space wherein
   the exchange of information is facilitated through the common agent
   between the various parallel and competing horizontal actors resulting in
   facilitation of collusions in the market.1 Hub-and-spoke cartels can have the
   same negative effect in the markets as is achieved though the horizontal
   agreements without the information ever getting transferred directly bet
   ween the competitors situated on the same horizontal plane, thus making it
   difficult for the investigators to prove the presence of a collusion among the
   competing businesses.