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36 Liverpool L. Rev. 1 (2015)

handle is hein.journals/lvplr36 and id is 1 raw text is: Liverpool Law Rev (2015) 36:1-5
DOI 10.1007/s10991-015-9159-6                                      CrossMark
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Editorial: The EU's Competition Policy Agenda
L. M. Davison' - D. Johnson'
Published online: 31 March 2015
© Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 2015
The EU's competition policy agenda is of paramount importance to the European
Union on a number of grounds. First, the public enforcement of EU competition
rules buttresses the Single European Market (SEM). By establishing an integra-
tionist regulatory level playing field across the Union and having the necessary
competition instruments in place to enforce it, EU competition policy increases
competition intensity within markets, thereby driving the competiveness of EU
firms. Secondly, and this is relatively new, EU competition policy increasingly
provides a vehicle whereby private individuals can claim damages that result from
the anti-competitive behaviour of firms, thereby reinforcing the deterrent effect of
this policy. Thirdly, the international dimension of the competition policy agenda is
important in not only securing access to overseas markets for EU firms by the
removal of beyond-the-border competition distortions in these markets; but also in
ensuring that the anti-competitive behaviour of non-EU based companies outside
the EU, which distorts competition within the SEM, comes under EU competition
law, thereby conferring extra-territorial reach upon the law.
The EU's competition policy agenda is not static but dynamic and evolving. This
Special Issue of the Liverpool Law review discusses each of these three themes in
turn. More specifically, the first theme of enhancing the integrationist level playing
field is covered by the papers of Ulrich von Koppenfels and Leigh Davison. The
former discusses proposed changes to the scope and operation of public
enforcement of EU merger or concentration control, specifically those put forward
® L. M. Davison
l.m.davison@hull.ac.uk
D. Johnson
d.johnson@hull.ac.uk
The Hull University Business School, University of Hull, Hull, UK

I Springer

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