Concerted practice enforcement in Russia: How judicial review shapes the standards of evidence and number of enforcement targets

A judicial review of the infringement decisions of the competition authority substantially affects the standard of evidence in competition enforcement as well as the structure of cases that the competition authority takes. Enforcement against concerted practice in Russia represents a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Svetlana B. Avdasheva, Svetlana V. Golovanova
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Voprosy Ekonomiki 2020-09-01
Series:Russian Journal of Economics
Online Access:https://rujec.org/article/51277/download/pdf/
id doaj-a5fc4bb29fc7456e85723c3edff3fbda
record_format Article
spelling doaj-a5fc4bb29fc7456e85723c3edff3fbda2020-11-25T01:38:26ZengVoprosy EkonomikiRussian Journal of Economics2405-47392020-09-016323925710.32609/j.ruje.63.5127751277Concerted practice enforcement in Russia: How judicial review shapes the standards of evidence and number of enforcement targetsSvetlana B. Avdasheva0Svetlana V. Golovanova1HSE UniversityHSE University A judicial review of the infringement decisions of the competition authority substantially affects the standard of evidence in competition enforcement as well as the structure of cases that the competition authority takes. Enforcement against concerted practice in Russia represents a case-study of interaction between commercial courts of first instance, the Highest Court, the competition authority as enforcer, market participants and the legislator to influence the standards of liability under investigation of concerted practice. We examine the judicial review of infringement decisions on concerted practice and track the evolution of legal definition and sufficiency of evidence in such cases. We show, first, that in Russian enforcement, the ability of the Highest Court to influence the criteria of first instance courts is limited (in contrast to the ability of the first instance court to influence the strategy of enforcement by the competition authority). Second, the increase in the burden of proof motivates the competition authority to refrain from an investigation of concerted practice, in accordance with the prediction of the model of the selection of enforcement target by reputation-maximizing authority. https://rujec.org/article/51277/download/pdf/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Svetlana B. Avdasheva
Svetlana V. Golovanova
spellingShingle Svetlana B. Avdasheva
Svetlana V. Golovanova
Concerted practice enforcement in Russia: How judicial review shapes the standards of evidence and number of enforcement targets
Russian Journal of Economics
author_facet Svetlana B. Avdasheva
Svetlana V. Golovanova
author_sort Svetlana B. Avdasheva
title Concerted practice enforcement in Russia: How judicial review shapes the standards of evidence and number of enforcement targets
title_short Concerted practice enforcement in Russia: How judicial review shapes the standards of evidence and number of enforcement targets
title_full Concerted practice enforcement in Russia: How judicial review shapes the standards of evidence and number of enforcement targets
title_fullStr Concerted practice enforcement in Russia: How judicial review shapes the standards of evidence and number of enforcement targets
title_full_unstemmed Concerted practice enforcement in Russia: How judicial review shapes the standards of evidence and number of enforcement targets
title_sort concerted practice enforcement in russia: how judicial review shapes the standards of evidence and number of enforcement targets
publisher Voprosy Ekonomiki
series Russian Journal of Economics
issn 2405-4739
publishDate 2020-09-01
description A judicial review of the infringement decisions of the competition authority substantially affects the standard of evidence in competition enforcement as well as the structure of cases that the competition authority takes. Enforcement against concerted practice in Russia represents a case-study of interaction between commercial courts of first instance, the Highest Court, the competition authority as enforcer, market participants and the legislator to influence the standards of liability under investigation of concerted practice. We examine the judicial review of infringement decisions on concerted practice and track the evolution of legal definition and sufficiency of evidence in such cases. We show, first, that in Russian enforcement, the ability of the Highest Court to influence the criteria of first instance courts is limited (in contrast to the ability of the first instance court to influence the strategy of enforcement by the competition authority). Second, the increase in the burden of proof motivates the competition authority to refrain from an investigation of concerted practice, in accordance with the prediction of the model of the selection of enforcement target by reputation-maximizing authority.
url https://rujec.org/article/51277/download/pdf/
work_keys_str_mv AT svetlanabavdasheva concertedpracticeenforcementinrussiahowjudicialreviewshapesthestandardsofevidenceandnumberofenforcementtargets
AT svetlanavgolovanova concertedpracticeenforcementinrussiahowjudicialreviewshapesthestandardsofevidenceandnumberofenforcementtargets
_version_ 1725053841053843456