在有与无之间的自我偏好:寻找巴西竞争法下的定义

Anna Binotto, Patricia Deluca
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在涉及数字平台市场的竞争和监管辩论中,“自我偏好”一词得到了极大的重视。然而,它越来越多地被用来指定具有独特结构、经济原理和效果的做法,包括在数字市场之外的背景下(尽管这些行为在以前已经存在,并且在现有法律基础下受到竞争当局的广泛审查)。在巴西,情况也不例外。这是由于缺乏完善的法律检验,包括关于非法推定和举证责任的定义,以及企图将各种不同的行为集中在同一“保护伞”下。继国际学术界的辩论,以及最相关的欧洲情况下的讨论之后,本文提供了初步建议,以便为巴西的自我偏好做法制定适当的法律测试。我们初步尝试区分不同类别的自我偏好,并建议,除其他方面外,CADE判例法中现有的损害检验和理论应该得到改进和调整,以推动对这些做法的反垄断分析。例如,对于学术界等同于自我偏好的经典(或“纯粹”)模式,有可能转向对CADE在基本设施原则(EFD)上的立场的适应。我们认为,不应完全放弃必要性测试,因为它是不同类型的自我偏好之间的相关除数,具有相关的执法影响,并提供了评估必要性的适应性法律测试的初步大纲。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Self-preferencing between all and nothing: in search for a definition under Brazilian competition law
The term self-preferencing has gained great prominence in the competition and regulation debate involving digital platform markets. However, it has increasingly been used to designate practices with distinct structure, economic rationale, and effects, including in contexts that fall outside of digital markets (even though those conducts already existed in preceding times and were widely scrutinized by competition authorities under the existing legal grounds). In Brazil, the situation is no different. This is due to the lack of a well-established legal test, including definitions about presumptions of illegality and burden of proof, and the attempt to concentrate, under the same “umbrella” diverse and distinct conducts. Following up on debates in international scholarship and, most relevantly, discussions within the European scenario, this article provides initial suggestions for the development of an adequate legal test for the practice of self-preferencing in Brazil. We make a preliminary attempt to differentiate between diverse categories of self-preferencing and suggest, among other aspects, that tests and theories of harm existing in CADE case law should be improved and adapted to drive antitrust analysis for those practices. This is the case, for example, for the classic (or “pure”) pattern of what the scholarship has equated to self-preferencing, being possible to turn to an adaptation of the CADE’s position on the essential facilities doctrine (EFD). We argue the essentiality test should not be completely abandoned, as it stands as a relevant divisor between distinct types of self-preferencing, with relevant enforcement implications, and provide aninitial outline of an adapted legal test to assess essentiality.
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