{"title":"The Interaction of Public and Private Cartel Enforcement","authors":"N. Rosenboom, D. I. '. Veld","doi":"10.54648/woco2019006","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The prohibition of cartels is enforced by both public and private legislation, which may interact in a way that reduces their effectiveness. This article investigates these interaction effects specifically for the leniency programme and civil damages claims, by means of a conjoint analysis. Dutch companies and competition lawyers were faced with different enforcement situations containing a mix of public and private enforcement elements and were asked in which case they were most likely to apply for leniency. Their answers are analysed with a nested logit model, allowing for the possibility that respondents would continue the cartel in either of the presented enforcement situation. For firms, the corporate and personal fine and the fine reduction mattered in deciding to apply for leniency. Competition lawyers took the fine reduction, disclosure of leniency and burden of proof into account when advising on self-reporting the agreement. Both groups of respondents answered that in 16–19% of the situations they would continue the agreement and not apply for leniency/advice to so do (The authors thank the participating economists of the Dutch Competition Authority for their input and suggestions. Special thanks to Dr Ron Kemp, the competition lawyers who were willing to discuss the research results with the authors, prof. Dr Barbara Baarsma and prof. Dr Bas ter Weel.).","PeriodicalId":43861,"journal":{"name":"World Competition","volume":"4 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.7000,"publicationDate":"2019-03-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"World Competition","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.54648/woco2019006","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"LAW","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The prohibition of cartels is enforced by both public and private legislation, which may interact in a way that reduces their effectiveness. This article investigates these interaction effects specifically for the leniency programme and civil damages claims, by means of a conjoint analysis. Dutch companies and competition lawyers were faced with different enforcement situations containing a mix of public and private enforcement elements and were asked in which case they were most likely to apply for leniency. Their answers are analysed with a nested logit model, allowing for the possibility that respondents would continue the cartel in either of the presented enforcement situation. For firms, the corporate and personal fine and the fine reduction mattered in deciding to apply for leniency. Competition lawyers took the fine reduction, disclosure of leniency and burden of proof into account when advising on self-reporting the agreement. Both groups of respondents answered that in 16–19% of the situations they would continue the agreement and not apply for leniency/advice to so do (The authors thank the participating economists of the Dutch Competition Authority for their input and suggestions. Special thanks to Dr Ron Kemp, the competition lawyers who were willing to discuss the research results with the authors, prof. Dr Barbara Baarsma and prof. Dr Bas ter Weel.).
对卡特尔的禁止是由公共和私人立法共同执行的,它们可能以一种降低其有效性的方式相互作用。本文采用联合分析的方法,专门对从宽程序和民事损害赔偿的相互作用进行了研究。荷兰公司和反垄断律师面临着不同的执法情况,其中包括公共和私人执法因素,并被问及在哪种情况下他们最有可能申请宽大处理。他们的回答是用一个嵌套的logit模型进行分析的,考虑到被调查者在目前的执法情况下继续卡特尔的可能性。对于公司来说,公司和个人的罚款以及罚款的减少在决定申请宽大处理时很重要。竞争律师在就自行报告协议提供建议时,考虑了罚款减免、披露宽免和举证责任。两组受访者都回答说,在16-19%的情况下,他们会继续协议,而不会申请宽大处理/建议(作者感谢荷兰竞争管理局参与的经济学家的投入和建议)。特别感谢Ron Kemp博士,他是愿意与作者Barbara Baarsma教授和Bas ter Weel教授讨论研究结果的竞争律师。