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Resale Price Maintenance and the Law: The Future of Vertical Restraints


ISBN13: 9781032315522
Published: October 2024
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Paperback (Hardback in 2023)
Price: £39.99
Hardback edition , ISBN13 9781032315485



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The publisher will print a copy to fulfill your order. Books can take between 1 to 3 weeks. Looseleaf titles between 1 to 2 weeks.

The question of how to properly enforce against RPM has been a contentious debate for decades on both sides of the Atlantic. The catalyst is the acceptance that RPM can generate both anti-competitive effects and pro-competitive efficiencies that need to be properly balanced to ensure against Type I/Type II errors and to create viable legislation.

Part I focuses on 100 years of US origins and the current legal approach to VR enforcement, which reveals the precedent responsible for the transition between per se illegality and the rule of reason thresholds at the federal level. Nine anti-competitive and 19 pro-competitive theoretical models are also introduced to clearly demonstrate the true nonconsensus existent between economists as to whether RPM is deleterious enough to justify a stringent approach to RPM regulation. Part II closely examines the EU origins and current legal structure, where RPM has maintained its hardcore by-object designation pursuant to Art. 101(1) TFEU with the consequence of having no safe harbours, no applicability of the De Minimus Doctrine, an onerous negative rebuttable presumption, non-severability of the agreement and almost no chance of obtaining an exemption under Art. 101(3). This is exacerbated by the EC’s lack of guidance on how to prove all conditions necessary for an Art. 101(3) exemption and when a vertical arrangement actually escapes Art. 101(1) applicability. The aim of this book is to examine the economic models, historical origins and legal structures of the US/EU regimes to develop proposals on how to modify the EU’s current legal structure to ensure proper enforcement of RPM behaviour that actually enhances legal certainty through a more aligned approach at the national level. Part III proposes five solutions which scrutinise the concepts of appreciability, hardcore and by-object restraints, to implement modifications to EU’s current legal framework to ensure RPM receives reasonable and equitable treatment in line with economic theory.

Subjects:
Competition Law, Law and Economics
Contents:
Preface
List of Abbreviations
List of Annexes and Tables

Chapter 1. Introduction

PART I – US HISTORICAL ORIGINS AND ECONOMIC FOUNDATIONS
Chapter 2. The Legal and Political Origins of RPM – United States 
Chapter 3. The Economics of Vertical Agreements – Background
Chapter 4 The Economics of Vertical Agreements – Models

PART II – EU HISTORICAL ORIGINS AND LEGAL STRUCTURE
Chapter 5. The Legal and Political Origins of RPM – European Union
Chapter 6. The Legal Concepts of By-Object, By-Effect and Appreciability

PART III – PROPOSALS, IMPLICATIONS AND SOLUTIONS
Chapter 7. Proposals and Solutions
Chapter 8. Conclusion

Annex 1 RPM US Origins
Annex 2. RPM Economic Models
Annex 3. RPM Model Timeline
Index