欧盟并购中的罚金:需要更多监管

N. Memeti
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引用次数: 0

摘要

罚款是处理违反竞争法行为的重要手段。欧盟委员会(EC)和欧盟法院主要对违反第一个支柱的案件进行罚款,很少根据第1/2003号法规第23(2)条发布的罚款指导方针处理滥用案件。与前两大支柱相比,并购并没有得到类似的学术关注。12自2017年以来,欧盟委员会越来越有兴趣对违反程序事项的并购进行调查并处以巨额罚款。因此,本文讨论了欧盟合并条例(EUMR)第14条在对与欧盟(EU)规模的合并施加罚款方面的应用。欧盟委员会的决定和欧盟法院对违反程序事项的合并罚款的判决在四个具体章节中进行了讨论。第一部分分析了欧盟法规第14(1)条,该条款授权欧盟委员会对违反程序事项的企业处以最高前一个营业年度总营业额1%的罚款,包括提供不正确或误导性信息等。本节将讨论Facebook的案例,这是欧盟委员会根据新的欧盟法规实施罚款的第一个案例。在这种情况下,尽管这些企业误导了欧共体,但基于所提供的合作,管理局决定减少罚款。此外,解决欧共体在接受提供的合作作为减轻因素时所适用的法律依据以及这是否可能在未来发展成为指导性的“先例”也很重要。第二部分涉及违反欧盟法规第4(1)条和第7(1)条的五起案件,涉及欧盟法规第14(2)条规定的罚款。对于其中的四个,欧盟法院的判决和欧盟委员会和国家竞争管理局(NCA)的决定进行了分析。第五起案件是针对安永会计师事务所(Ernst and Young)的案件,该案件首次对“持枪跳跃”的概念做出了初步裁决。第三部分论述《企业法》第14条第(3)款和合并的罚款方法。通过对这五种情况逐一进行审查,重要的是要解决罚款时考虑的因素。一个明显的缺陷是缺乏法律依据,无论表现为硬法还是软法。在这里,询问欧盟委员会以何种方式施加罚款以及为什么它偶尔反映适用于欧盟竞争法其他支柱的罚款准则是相关的。最后要解决的是政策问题,需要平衡欧共体的自由裁量权和相关的法律原则,如法律确定性、平等待遇、透明度和一致性第四节为结束语。
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Monetary Fines in EU Mergers: In Need for More Regulation
Monetary fines represent an important instrument to address violations of Competition Law. The European Commission (EC) and the EU Courts have been primarily engaged in imposing fines in cases of breach of the first pillar, and have rarely dealt with cases of abuse based on the fining guidelines issued in accordance with Article 23(2) of Regulation 1/2003. Compared to the first two pillars, mergers have not received similar scholarly attention.1 2 Since 2017, the EC has expressed a growing interest in investigating and imposing significant fines to mergers and acquisitions in breach of procedural matters. Therefore this article addresses the application of Article 14 of the European Union Merger Regulation (EUMR) in imposing fines to mergers with European Union (EU) dimension. The EC decisions and EU Courts’ judgments related to fines on mergers in breach of procedural matters are discussed in four specific sections. The first section analyses article 14(1) of the EUMR, which empowers the EC to impose a fine of up to 1% of the total turnover in the preceding business year on undertakings for breach of procedural matters, including, among others, for providing incorrect or misleading information. This section will address the case of Facebook as the first case in which the EC imposed fines based on the new EUMR. In this case, although the undertakings mislead the EC, based on the offered cooperation, the Authority decided to reduce the fine. In addition, it is also important to address the legal basis applied by the EC in accepting the offered cooperation as a mitigating factor and whether this may develop into a guiding “precedent” in the future. The second section deals with five cases of violations of articles 4(1) and 7(1) EUMR related to fines prescribed in article 14(2) EUMR. With regards to four of them, judgments of EU Courts and decisions of the EC and National Competition Authority (NCA) are analysed. The fifth case, the one on Ernst and Young, provides for the first preliminary ruling on the notion of “gun-jumping”. The third section deals with Article 14(3) and the fining methods on mergers. By reviewing each of these five cases, it is important to address factors taken into consideration when imposing fines. An obvious deficiency is the absence of a legal basis, regardless of whether manifested in hard or soft law. Here it is relevant to inquire in what manner the EC imposes fines and why it occasionally mirrors the fining guidelines applicable to other pillars of EU Competition Law. The last point to be addressed is the one of policy and the need to balance EC discretional powers and relevant legal principles such as legal certainty, equal treatment, transparency, and consistency.3 The fourth section provides for concluding remarks.
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