1st Edition

Competition Laws, National Interests and International Relations

By Ko Unoki Copyright 2020
    142 Pages
    by Routledge

    142 Pages
    by Routledge

    Most of the competition laws currently enforced by states aim to protect consumer welfare and promote fair competition by regulating against anticompetitive behavior. Yet despite the shared objectives the global community does not have a common global competition law. In exploring the reasons for this, this book takes a unique interdisciplinary approach by using international relations theories to illustrate the relationship between the enforcement of competition laws and international relations through an analysis of competition cases relating to cartels, extraterritoriality, and corporate mergers and acquisitions.

    Through an examination of this relationship, this book will consider why the views held by state leaders on the condition of international relations may at times lead them to either arbitrarily over-enforce or disregard their competition laws to the detriment of fair competition and consumer welfare. This book also provides suggestions for global business investors who face competition law issues on how they may accommodate such views.

    1. Introduction

    2. The Development of Competition Laws and a Hypothesis

    3. Overview of International Relations Theories

    4. Cartels: Illegal and/or in the National Interest?

    5. The Extraterritorial Application of Competition Laws

    6. Mergers and Acquisitions and National Interests

    7. Conclusion

    Biography

    Ko Unoki has been involved with global marketing, corporate strategy formulation, and strategic alliances while working in the electronics and healthcare industries for several decades, and was also a Senior Fellow at The 21st Century Public Policy Institute of the Federation of Japanese Economic Organizations (Keidanren). He received a Doctor of Business Administration degree from Hitotsubashi University, Japan.

    'This work places a legal analysis of competition policy in the context of international political ideologies (the Realist School, the Liberal School and the Power Transition School) and, in this respect, is a unique contribution to the field of jurisprudence on competition and law and policy and also of the theories of international politics. The reviewer has seen many works on competition law and policy in the area of law and economics. It is the first time that the reviewer encounters a work where jurisprudence and political science are combined to make an integrated whole and, in this respect, this work may usher a new approach in the study of competition law and policy.'

    Dr. Mitsuo Matsushita, Professor Emeritus of the University of Tokyo, Former member of the WTO Appellate Body