
Firm Dominance in EU Competition Law
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Inhalt
- Intro
- Half-Title Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Acknowledgments
- General Introduction
- [A] Snapshots and Stories: A Timeline of Competitive Process
- [B] Little Interest for a Dynamic Appraisal of Firm Dominance
- [C] In a Nutshell
- CHAPTER 1 The Process Paradox and Seven Conventional Origins of Firm Dominance
- §1.01 INTRODUCTION
- §1.02 COMPETITION IS A PROCESS
- [A] The Paradox of Competition as a Process in the Case Law
- [1] Express Considerations
- [2] Competitive Process Through Proxies
- [B] Competition as a Process in the Economic Literature
- [C] The Origins of Dominance as Part of the Process of Competition
- §1.03 WHY DO THE ORIGINS OF DOMINANCE MATTER?
- [A] A Metaphor
- [B] Diagnoses
- [C] Remedies
- §1.04 SEVEN CONVENTIONAL ORIGINS OF DOMINANCE
- [A] Review of the Literature
- [1] Economic Literature
- [2] Strategic Management Literature
- [3] Legal Scholarship
- [B] The Seven Conventional Origins of Dominance
- [1] Statutory Dominance
- [2] Historical Operators
- [3] Natural Monopolies
- [4] Investments
- [5] Intangible Resources
- [6] Accident and Luck
- [7] Anticompetitive Behavior on the Road to Dominance
- §1.05 LIMITS OF THE INQUIRY
- [A] Merger Control
- [B] Categorical Approach
- CHAPTER 2 Statutory Dominance: The State at the Origin of Market Power
- §2.01 INTRODUCTION
- §2.02 A CONCEPTUAL NOTE
- §2.03 STATUTORY DOMINANCE: THE STATE AND THE MARKET
- §2.04 THE INDEPENDENT BUT UNDIFFERENTIATED APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 102 TFEU TO STATUTORY DOMINANT FIRMS
- [A] The Independent Application of Article 102 TFEU
- [1] Article 106(1) TFEU and Article 102 TFEU
- [2] State Aid Law
- [B] The Undifferentiated Application of Article 102 TFEU
- [1] A Judicial Choice
- [2] The Enforcement Paradox
- [3] A Policy Paradox
- [C] Summation
- §2.05 OPENING THE BLACK BOX: STATUTORY DOMINANCE MATTERS
- [A] An Initial Perspective
- [B] The Prospective Process
- [C] Quid of Article 345 TFEU?
- [D] Summation
- §2.06 THE Post Danmark Saga: An Incomplete Game Changer?
- [A] The Post Danmark Saga: A Turning Point and a Word of Caution
- [1] A Turning Point
- [2] A Word of Caution
- [B] Transposing the Principle of Equality of Opportunity as a Guiding Principle
- [1] The Common Place of Equality of Opportunity in the Case Law
- [2] Equality of Opportunity as a Guiding Principle in Case of Statutory Dominance
- [C] How to Incorporate the Statutory Origins of Firm Dominance in the Analysis of Abusive Conduct
- [1] Leveraging Statutory Advantages: A Cost Benchmark
- [2] A Proactive Approach Toward Facilitating Entry
- [3] Non-contestable Markets and Less Efficient Competitors
- [4] Reducing the Range of Objective Justifications
- §2.07 THE APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 102 TFEU TO FOREIGN STATUTORY DOMINANCE
- [A] Geoeconomics and Global Competition
- [B] Abuse of Foreign Statutory Dominance
- §2.08 CONCLUSION
- CHAPTER 3 Historical Operators: The Legacy of the State
- §3.01 INTRODUCTION
- §3.02 UNIFYING TERMINOLOGY
- §3.03 THE Post Danmark Obiter Dictum: A Reminder
- §3.04 HISTORICAL OPERATORS BEFORE Post Danmark I
- [A] Describing Historical Operators
- [B] The Absence of Competition for the Market and State Resources
- [1] The Absence of Competition for (and in) the Market
- [2] State Funding
- [C] Historical Advantages and Equality of Opportunity
- [1] Equality of Opportunity in Article 102 TFEU
- [2] Equality of Opportunity and the Process of Competition
- [D] First-Movers and Adjacent Markets
- [1] What Is the Story?
- [2] A Unidirectional Analysis: What About Pioneering Disadvantages?
- [3] Standing up for Recoupment
- [E] Incentives to Invest and Innovate
- [1] Telefónica and Beyond
- [2] Ex ante Incentives: Analysis for Historical Operators
- [F] Competition Between Historical Operators and Effect on Trade
- §3.05 HISTORICAL OPERATORS AFTER Post Danmark I
- [A] Orange Polska
- [B] Slovak Telekom
- §3.06 THE TRANSIENT HISTORICAL POSITION AND INCENTIVES TO BEHAVE ANTICOMPETITIVELY
- [A] Sustainability
- [B] Incentives to Behave Anticompetitively
- §3.07 CONCLUSION
- CHAPTER 4 The Natural Monopolist
- §4.01 INTRODUCTION
- §4.02 THE ECONOMIC THEORY OF NATURAL MONOPOLY
- [A] What a Natural Monopoly Is Not
- [B] Natural Monopoly Is Found in Nature
- [C] Natural Monopoly in Contemporary IO Terms
- [D] Summation
- §4.03 THE MARKET REALITY OF NATURAL MONOPOLIES
- [A] Natural Monopolies and Industrial History
- [1] Telecommunications
- [2] Railroads
- [3] Summation
- [B] Natural Monopoly and the Competitive Process
- §4.04 WHITHER NATURAL MONOPOLIST? A LEGAL ANALYSIS
- [A] Natural Monopolies in the Case Law
- [1] Natural Monopolies
- [2] Are "De Facto Monopolies" Natural Monopolies?
- [3] Efficiency and Natural Monopolies
- [B] Natural Monopolies and Article 102 TFEU Enforcement
- [1] Natural Monopoly Defense
- [2] The "More Efficient" Firm Framework
- §4.05 CONCLUSION
- Chapter 5 The Investor Dominant Firm
- §5.01 INTRODUCTION
- §5.02 THE PLACE OF INVESTMENT EFFORTS IN ARTICLE 102 TFEU
- [A] A General Look into the Place of Investments in Article 102 TFEU Case Law
- [1] United Brands and the Forgotten Paragraph
- [2] Commercial Solvents and the Protection of a Rival's Investments
- [3] Microsoft and the Echoes of United Brands and Commercial Solvents
- [4] Intel, Moore's "Law" and Endogenous Change
- [5] Google Shopping and Investments as an Entry Barrier
- [B] Doctrinal Constructs and Investment Myopia
- [1] The Existence and Exercise Dichotomy
- [2] The Unwarranted Asymmetry Between Intellectual and Physical Property in Refusal to Deal Cases
- §5.03 INVESTMENTS, MARKET UNCERTAINTY AND THE COMPETITIVE PROCESS
- §5.04 A PROCESS-ORIENTED APPROACH TO ARTICLE 102 TFEU AND INVESTOR DOMINANT FIRMS
- [A] Depropertization and the Competitive Process
- [B] The Misleading Non-contestable Share of the Demand
- [1] The "Old" Leveraging Theory
- [2] The "More-Economic" Leveraging Theory
- [3] Incumbency Advantages: A Process Perspective
- [4] A Simple Process Comparative and a Pragmatic Approach
- [C] Incumbency Disadvantages: Google Shopping and Beyond
- §5.05 CONCLUSION
- CHAPTER 6 The Intangible Dominant Firm
- §6.01 INTRODUCTION
- §6.02 WHY ARE SOME FIRMS MORE SUCCESSFUL THAN OTHERS? A STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT PERSPECTIVE
- [A] Intangible Resources
- [B] The Inimitability of Intangible Resources
- [C] Intangible Dominance and the Cumulative Characteristic of the Competitive Process
- [1] Path Dependence and Reputation
- [2] Time Compression and Experience
- [D] Summation
- §6.03 INTANGIBLE RESOURCES AND UNILATERAL FIRM BEHAVIOR
- [A] Competitive Asymmetries
- [B] The Expansion of Intangible Dominance and Google Shopping
- [C] The Limits of Centralized Knowledge: Michelin I and Intel
- [1] Michelin I
- [2] Intel
- §6.04 CONCLUSION
- CHAPTER 7 The Lucky Monopolist
- §7.01 INTRODUCTION
- §7.02 THE PASSIVE ACQUISITION OF DOMINANCE
- [A] Who Is the Lucky Monopolist?
- [B] The Relevance of Luck for Dominance
- [C] Discovering the Lucky Monopolist
- §7.03 THE LUCKY MONOPOLIST UNDER ANTITRUST SCRUTINY
- [A] A Window for Opportunistic Behavior
- [B] Luck and Article 102 TFEU Case Law
- [1] Unforeseen Events
- [2] Wrongly Granted Monopolies
- [3] The Luck Defenses
- [C] Price Gouging (Regulation)
- §7.04 CONCLUSION
- CHAPTER 8 The Anticompetitive Road to Dominance
- §8.01 INTRODUCTION
- §8.02 SECTION 2 SA AND ARTICLE 102 TFEU ON THE ROAD TO MONOPOLY
- [A] A Threshold Misjudgment
- [B] The Paradoxical Irrelevance of Market Power in Article 102 TFEU
- [C] Market Power at the Center of Monopolization Offenses in US Antitrust Laws
- §8.03 THE ANTICOMPETITIVE ACQUISITION OF MONOPOLY POWER AND EXERCISE OF THAT POWER
- [A] The Road to and Exercise of SMP
- [B] Deception in a Standard-Setting Process
- [1] In re. Dell: Stiglerian and Bainian Market Power
- [2] Rambus and the Anticompetitive Road to Monopoly on Both Sides of the Atlantic
- [3] Broadcom: Outcomes or Processes?
- [C] Anticompetitive Behavior for Dominance
- [D] Summation
- §8.04 FIXING THE ENFORCEMENT GAP IN ARTICLE 102 TFEU
- [A] Differences Between Processes and Outcomes
- [B] How to Bridge the Gap?
- [C] Causation and Abuse
- [D] Causation and Remedial Action
- §8.05 CONCLUSION
- General Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Table of Cases, Opinions and Decisions
- Table of Legislation
- Index
- INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION LAW SERIES
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