Title: Trade Associations and EU Competition Law
1Trade Associations and EU Competition Law
- Alan S. Reid
- Lecturer in Law
- Robert Gordon University, Aberdeen, UK
2Purposes of Competition Law
- Prevent Cartels
- Prevent anti-competitive takeovers and mergers
- Preventing abuse of a dominant position
- Restricting the power of member States to
interfere with the market place
3Objectives of EU competition law
- Pursuit of economic efficiency
- Protection of consumers/smaller firms
- Creation/Continuing operation of the Internal
Market in conjunction with the free movement
provisions of the EC Treaty
4Article 81 - Cartels
- Trade Associations may cause competition
difficulties where the following characteristics
are present - Oligopolistic market
- Low level of product differentiation
- Association represents a wide range of interests,
horizontally and vertically manufacturers/distri
butors/wholesalers
5Problems posed by Trade Associations
- May set minimum or maximum prices
- May set quotas
- May impose penalties for breach of the agreement
6Rules of the Trade Associations
- Rules of the Association, even if non-binding,
may violate competition law - Foreclosure of the domestic or regional market
through product certification systems - Degree of control wielded by the Association in
the relevant market, determines whether
competition law has been violated
7Objectives of the Association
- Case C-137/95 SPO
- Dutch Building Trade Associations
- 3 Purposes
- Promote competition
- Prevent improper conduct in price tendering
- Promote the formation of economically justified
prices
8Membership Criteria of the Trade Association
- Case T-206/99 Metropole
- European Broadcasting Union
- Provided for 2 types of membership active and
associate - Metropole repeatedly failed to gain membership
- Other companies remained associates after they
failed to satisfy the membership criteria - Discriminatory membership rules
9Rules for Conducting Business SCK Case
- SCK certified crane hirers in the Netherlands and
FNK was the umbrella organisation for crane
hirers in the Netherlands - Practical result of the rules of both
organisations non-SCK certified companies could
not penetrate the Dutch market - SCK operated a closed system, since it refused to
recognise the certificates issued by equivalent
foreign certifiers - Thus the purpose of SCK was not to ensure quality
BUT to restrict non-Dutch competition
10Exchanges of Information
- Information Exchange Network
- Sensitive price information distributed between
the members of the trade association - Transparency to be welcomed in a healthily
competitive industry - Transparency destructive of competition in a
tight oligopoly - Uncertainty replaced by parallelism
11Exchanges of Information II
- Can be very useful for companies
- They understand the market and can adapt their
policies accordingly - However, can be anti-competitive where the
information - Is very detailed
- Is current
- Is from very reliable sources
- Even information exchange in an informal setting
can give rise to competition concerns - Gentlemans agreement will also violate EU
Competition law
12State Aid
- Trade Associations may object to the granting of
such aid or indeed the recovery of illegal aid
from its members - Case T-55/99 illegal state aid was recovered
from the members of the Spanish Commercial
Transport Association - Case T-613/97 the aid given by La Poste to its
subsidiary was not illegal
13Enforcers of Competition Law
- Regulation 1/03 decentralises the enforcement of
European competition law - Commission will be freed up to concentrate on
the strategically important cases - This new policy necessitates a shift from public
law enforcement to that of private law
enforcement, via affected legal and natural
persons
14Competition law enforcement
- 1 Commission may undertake its own investigations
- 2 Commission receives notification from member
States - 3 Commission receives notification from
interested persons - 2 and 3 become more important next year after
Regulation 1/03 comes into force
15Trade Associations and direct and individual
concern
- Administrative Competition law is already
generous to applicants aggrieved by
anti-competitive activity - Article 230, the general provision on standing is
much more restrictive direct and individual
concern
16Direct and Individual concern a relaxation of
the rules?
- Case 50/00 Union de Pequenos
- Trade Association can only take action to annul a
Community measure where - Legal Provision expressly grants a procedural
power to the Association - Association represents an undertaking which could
bring an action - Association is individually distinguished
- HELD NO RIGHT TO BRING AN ACTION
17Direct and Individual Concern IIA false dawn?
- Case T-177/01 Jego Quere
- Court of First Instance held that individual
concern had been too restrictively defined - Court of Justice cases are to be preferred over
CFI jurisprudence - Jego Quere have appealed and Advocate General
Jacobs has delivered his Opinion in the case - He appears to be taking a very conservative
approach to direct and individual concern which
he spurned in the original case
18Conclusion
- Trade Associations can act anti-competitively or
pro-competitively - Short-term protectionist policies may achieve
short term gains at the expense of innovation and
fundamental reform which will provide long-term
growth and security - Trade Associations can act as an early warning
system - Trade Associations can help European industry
respond to the rigours of globalisation and the
need for improved competitiveness