欧盟竞争执法中的承诺决策:政策有效性与形式法治

IF 0.3 Q3 LAW
R. Stones
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引用次数: 5

摘要

2019年是第1/2003号条例生效15周年,为分析承诺决定作为欧盟层面非卡特尔竞争法调查的主要执法机制的兴起提供了有利条件。承诺决定,即结束竞争案件的一揽子补救义务,以回应委员会的关注,具有不可否认的行政上诉。它们赋予欧盟委员会绝对的自由裁量权来抵制任何形式的市场行为,无论是超出欧盟法院根据《欧盟自由贸易条约》第101条和第102条推断的现有法律范围,还是低于禁止法律上有争议的商业行为的严格门槛。此外,委员会可以取得任何补救结果,即使不相称或似乎与它的竞争关切无关,从而根据其理想化的设想重新划定市场。在这方面,承诺决定使委员会能够最有效地实现其政策目标。然而,本文认为,这种市场干预方法与实现欧盟竞争执法中正式法治的理想存在重大分歧:企业的规范性确定性,由普遍法律规范的平等适用促进,这些规范受到法院的密切监督。这提供了一种具有相当政治和经济价值的令人向往的法律形式。利用承诺决定来执行欧盟竞争政策,通过特别的、特定主体的决策,以不可预见的补救义务为条件,不仅对未来委员会决策的法律可理解性有系统性损害,而且对欧盟法院在该领域从条约中推断出的整个规范体系也有系统性损害。对承付决定的补救相称性进行司法审查的相当宽松的做法在一定程度上促成了这一问题。然而,有人建议,欧盟法院在很大程度上无法补救新的伤害理论或特定主体确定的问题,履行法治理想所设想的重要剩余作用,因为一个主要超出其控制的因素:缺乏提交给他们审查的承诺决定。为此目的,该条最后建议自动审查法院的承诺决定。这有望促进欧盟委员会的有效政策成就与当代欧盟竞争执法中正式法治理想的实现之间更为平衡的协调。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Commitment Decisions in EU Competition Enforcement: Policy Effectiveness v. the Formal Rule of Law
Marking the fifteenth anniversary of the entry into force of Regulation 1/2003, 2019 offers a vantage point from which to analyse the rise of commitment decisions as the primary enforcement mechanism for non-cartel competition law investigations at EU level. Commitment decisions, the closure of competition cases with a package of remedial obligations in response to Commission concerns, have an undeniable administrative appeal. They afford the Commission the absolute discretion to counteract any form of market conduct, whether beyond the pre-existing scope of the law deduced by the EU Courts from Articles 101 and 102 TFEU, or below exacting thresholds for prohibition of legally controversial business practices. Furthermore, the Commission can secure any remedial outcome, even if disproportionate or seemingly disconnected from its competitive concerns, to thereby redraw markets according to its idealized vision. In this regard, commitment decisions allow the Commission to achieve its policy goals with utmost effectiveness. Nevertheless, this article argues that such a method of market intervention represents a significant divergence from realizing the ideal of the formal rule of law in EU competition enforcement: normative certainty for businesses, facilitated by the equal application of generalized legal norms, which are subject to close oversight by courts. This offers an aspirational legal form of considerable political and economic value. Using commitment decisions to enforce EU competition policy via ad hoc, subject-specific decision making, conditional upon unforeseeable remedial obligations, is of systemic detriment to the legal comprehensibility of not just future Commission decision making, but the entire edifice of norms deduced from the Treaties by the EU Courts in this field. A rather relaxed approach to judicially reviewing the remedial proportionality of commitment decisions has partly contributed to this issue. However it is suggested that the EU Courts are largely unable to remedy the problems of novel theories of harm or subject-specific determinations, delivering upon their important residual role envisaged by the rule of law ideal, because of a factor mostly beyond their control: the lack of commitment decisions brought before them for review. To that end, the article concludes by recommending the automatic review of commitment decisions by the Courts. This would hopefully foster a more balanced reconciliation of effective policy achievement by the Commission and realization of the formal rule of law ideal in contemporary EU competition enforcement.
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