Antitrust oversight gets revised draft

   2022-06-28 ecns0
核心提示:The State Administration for Market Regulation, China's top market watchdog, raised the revenue bar for declaring a "concentration of operat
The State Administration for Market Regulation, China's top market watchdog, raised the revenue bar for declaring a "concentration of operators" in a revised draft, after another five draft rules and provisions related to anti-monopoly practices were opened to public comment on Monday.Industry experts said that many of the rules, based on international experience, are expected to further improve China's anti-monopoly rules and enforcement, and drive fairer competition in the marketplace.According to the draft regarding the concentration of operators, the country will raise the bar for companies to declare such behavior, from the current 10 billion yuan ($1.5 billion) and 2 billion yuan to 12 billion yuan and 4 billion yuan, respectively, in terms of global and China turnover.The concentration of operators is a practice where one business operator obtains control over another that may lead to a monopolistic or quasi-monopolistic situation. Antitrust authorities in many countries require operators to declare many mergers and acquisitions in advance to prevent potential monopolies."Based on estimates, raising the turnover bar will effectively reduce the institutional transaction costs of businesses and create broad development space for various market players, especially for small and medium-sized enterprises," said Wang Xianlin, a member of the expert advisory group of the State Council's anti-monopoly committee.The new draft also optimized declaration criteria, including adding the market valuation of an acquiree as a criterion, to reflect its market potential and protect the innovative vitality of more market players.Companies will need to seek an antitrust review of planned M&As if one of the parties' total annual revenue is over 12 billion yuan ($1.79 billion), the draft said."Strengthening anti-monopoly supervision over M&As involving large enterprises is a global trend. The United States imposes additional anti-monopoly obligations on enterprises with revenue exceeding $30 billion," said Wang, who is also director of the Center for Competition Law and Policy at Shanghai Jiao Tong University.According to the SAMR, China concluded 727 cases related to the concentration of business operators last year, which registered a significant increase over previous years.On Monday, six draft rules and provisions that aim to improve antitrust efforts were opened for public comment. The proposals include the prevention of the abuse of intellectual property, administrative power and dominant market positions, as well as anti-monopoly agreements.For instance, a draft stipulated that if an operator abuses intellectual property rights to exclude or restrict competition, antitrust authorities can impose on the operator a fine of at least 1 percent but no more than 10 percent of the company's total sales in the previous year."With more detailed antitrust efforts, antitrust authorities can focus on major cases with limited law enforcement resources. It will help improve law enforcement efficiency as well. Eventually it will lead to a more open and international business climate," said Wei Shilin, deputy director of the Competition Law Committee of Beijing Intellectual Property Law Research Institute.The State Administration for Market Regulation, China's top market watchdog, raised the revenue bar for declaring a "concentration of operators" in a revised draft, after another five draft rules and provisions related to anti-monopoly practices were opened to public comment on Monday.Industry experts said that many of the rules, based on international experience, are expected to further improve China's anti-monopoly rules and enforcement, and drive fairer competition in the marketplace.According to the draft regarding the concentration of operators, the country will raise the bar for companies to declare such behavior, from the current 10 billion yuan ($1.5 billion) and 2 billion yuan to 12 billion yuan and 4 billion yuan, respectively, in terms of global and China turnover.The concentration of operators is a practice where one business operator obtains control over another that may lead to a monopolistic or quasi-monopolistic situation. Antitrust authorities in many countries require operators to declare many mergers and acquisitions in advance to prevent potential monopolies."Based on estimates, raising the turnover bar will effectively reduce the institutional transaction costs of businesses and create broad development space for various market players, especially for small and medium-sized enterprises," said Wang Xianlin, a member of the expert advisory group of the State Council's anti-monopoly committee.The new draft also optimized declaration criteria, including adding the market valuation of an acquiree as a criterion, to reflect its market potential and protect the innovative vitality of more market players.Companies will need to seek an antitrust review of planned M&As if one of the parties' total annual revenue is over 12 billion yuan ($1.79 billion), the draft said."Strengthening anti-monopoly supervision over M&As involving large enterprises is a global trend. The United States imposes additional anti-monopoly obligations on enterprises with revenue exceeding $30 billion," said Wang, who is also director of the Center for Competition Law and Policy at Shanghai Jiao Tong University.According to the SAMR, China concluded 727 cases related to the concentration of business operators last year, which registered a significant increase over previous years.On Monday, six draft rules and provisions that aim to improve antitrust efforts were opened for public comment. The proposals include the prevention of the abuse of intellectual property, administrative power and dominant market positions, as well as anti-monopoly agreements.For instance, a draft stipulated that if an operator abuses intellectual property rights to exclude or restrict competition, antitrust authorities can impose on the operator a fine of at least 1 percent but no more than 10 percent of the company's total sales in the previous year."With more detailed antitrust efforts, antitrust authorities can focus on major cases with limited law enforcement resources. It will help improve law enforcement efficiency as well. Eventually it will lead to a more open and international business climate," said Wei Shilin, deputy director of the Competition Law Committee of Beijing Intellectual Property Law Research Institute.
 
标签: Economy
反对 0举报 0 评论 0
 

免责声明:本文仅代表作者个人观点,与好速译英语翻译(本网)无关。其原创性以及文中陈述文字和内容未经本站证实,对本文以及其中全部或者部分内容、文字的真实性、完整性、及时性本站不作任何保证或承诺,请读者仅作参考,并请自行核实相关内容。
    本网站有部分内容均转载自其它媒体,转载目的在于传递更多信息,并不代表本网赞同其观点和对其真实性负责,若因作品内容、知识产权、版权和其他问题,请及时提供相关证明等材料并与我们留言联系,本网站将在规定时间内给予删除等相关处理.

点击排行