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3 Wash. U. Global Stud. L. Rev. 277 (2004)
Competition Policy for East Asia

handle is hein.journals/wasglo3 and id is 293 raw text is: COMPETITION POLICY FOR EAST ASIA
JOHN 0. HALEY*
Considerable effort has gone into the drafting and enactment of
competition laws throughout East Asia during the past decade. Skeptics
might say that much of this effort has been wasted. The problem, they
might argue, is misplaced reliance on inappropriate models. Simply stated,
the legislative paradigms used for national competition legislation
throughout the region do not adequately address the basic underpinnings
of monopoly power and barriers to free and competitive markets in East
Asia or in most other developing states. Nor, some might add, can these
models be reasonably transplanted into legal systems that lack the
institutional and cultural infrastructures necessary for their effective
implementation. The models themselves originated in the United States
and Europe over a half-century ago. Indeed the history of antitrust in the
United States, and the development of competition law in Japan and
Europe, raise questions whether these models have any applicability to
China and other parts of East Asia. Enacted under conditions and
circumstances that simply do not apply to China, or much of East Asia
today, these models were designed to deal with problems in advanced
capitalist states in which the influence of private actors in national and
international markets often seemed to outmatch the role of the state. The
primary aim of these models was to regulate private actors in order to
restore and maintain competition. None were concerned with state power
or the need of the state to create conditions for effective market
competition.
Many may agree with this or similar assessments of the applicability of
American and European competition law models to China and East Asia,
but still disagree that the effort has been fruitless. The proliferation of
competition law in East Asia beginning in Japan over a half-century ago
has had at least one overriding benefit. These legislative efforts have
stimulated interest in and active concern for effective competition policy
throughout the region. Such interest has in turn provided in each country
that has enacted legislation the catalyst for study and research, and ideas
and expertise on competition policy, regardless of how meaningful or
effective such legislation ostensibly may appear. As awareness of the
social and economic gains of effective competition policy grows, expertise
* Wiley B. Rutledge Professor of Law and Director, The Whitney R. Harris Institute for Global
Legal Studies, Washington University School of Law in St. Louis.

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