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Best Practices / Guidelines


  • 26-November-2018

    English

    Treatment of legally privileged information in competition proceedings

    Different approaches to legal professional privilege among jurisdictions create challenges regarding companies’ international operations, and authorities’ co-operation and sharing of information in cross-border cases involving jurisdictions offering dissimilar levels of protection. This November 2018 OECD discussion dealt with these questions.

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  • 10-September-2018

    English

    Market Studies Guide for Competition Authorities

    This guide describes the process and different steps of a competition market study and can be used by competition authorities, and policymakers more broadly, when executing market studies and designing their framework.

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  • 6-April-2018

    English

    Rethinking the use of traditional antitrust enforcement tools in multi-sided markets

    Are the traditional antitrust enforcement tools of a competition agency sufficient in the context of a multi-sided market? In June 2017, the OECD Competition Committee held a discussion in presence of several experts to explore the topic.

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  • 20-December-2017

    English

    Co-operation between Competition Agencies and Regulators in the Financial Sector: 10 years on from the Financial Crisis

    In the aftermath of the global financial crisis, an international consensus emerged that financial institutions should be regulated more strongly to improve their resilience. In December 2017, the OECD held a roundtable discussion on co-operation between competition agencies and regulators in the financial sector with a focus on the 10 years since the last financial crisis.

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  • 6-December-2017

    English

    Extraterritorial reach of competition remedies

    How do authorities deal with the extraterritorial reach of the remedies they apply to a given conduct? What if different remedies are imposed in different jurisdictions? These and other questions have been discussed at the OECD during a roundtable on the extraterritorial reach of remedies in December 2017.

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  • 24-November-2017

    English

    Safe harbours and legal presumptions in competition law

    In competition law there are rules for finding that a certain behaviour is presumed to be anticompetitive –so-called presumptions of illegality – and for finding that conduct is lawful – so-called safe harbours. In December 2017, the OECD held a discussion to explore safe harbours and presumptions of illegality in competition law.

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  • 20-October-2017

    English

    Market study methodologies for competition authorities

    Market studies are a valuable instrument used by many competition authorities to enhance their understanding of markets and potential competition issues. In June 2017 the OECD Competition Committee held a roundtable to identify common techniques and good practices in selecting and applying market study methodologies. Access the documentation.

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  • 16-August-2017

    English

    Judicial perspectives on competition law

    The 2017 Global Forum on Competition held a roundtable discussion to address various dimensions of the judicial adjudication of competition law, across different legal systems traditions. This page contains all documentation related to the discussion.

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  • 14-August-2017

    English

    Are competition and democracy symbiotic?

    The 2017 Global Forum on Competition explored to what extent competition is a sufficient or a necessary condition for democracy to thrive, particularly when considering countries transitioning to democratic systems of government. See more about this discussion held at the 2017 Global Forum on Competition.

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  • 21-July-2017

    English

    Common ownership by institutional investors and its impact on competition

    The simultaneous ownership of shares in competing firms by institutional investors (“common ownership”) has been investigated in several academic studies for its potential impact on competitive conditions. In December 2017, the OECD held a discussion to explore whether there are verifiable theories of harm in connection with common ownership, and whether new approaches are needed to address them.

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