Free Movement of Judgments: Increasing Deterrence of International Cartels Though Jurisdictional Reliance
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Editors
Authors
Gal, Michal S.
Date
2008-10
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Language
en
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Abstract
This article challenges the conventional wisdom that not much can be done under
the existing atomistic system of antitrust enforcement to solve the problem of suboptimal deterrence of international cartels. Low deterrence results from the fact that international cartels are generally prosecuted by only a fraction of the jurisdictions harmed by them and that monetary sanctions in those jurisdictions are generally based on harm to their domestic markets only. To solve this problem, this article proposes a novel legal tool which enables countries to adopt and rely upon foreign findings of international hard-core cartels, provided that the foreign decisions meet criteria that ensure that such reliance is reasonable and fair. As elaborated, this free movement of judgments holds potential to overcome the main obstacles to efficient deterrence and to significantly increase both domestic as well as global welfare. Its costs can also be largely overcome by designing appropriate solutions. The political implications are also not prohibitive. As shown, jurisdictions already rely on foreign judgments that do not significantly differ from the decisions at hand.