Global Competition Law
Auteur : Louis Vogel
Sommaire de l’ouvrage
Introduction
Part 1: Member States
Title 1: ARGENTINA
Title 2: AUSTRALIA
Title 3: BRAZIL
Title 4: CANADA
Title 5: CHILE
Title 6: CHINA (PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF)
I: Context and scope
II: Restrictive agreements
Section 2: Enforcement
Chapter 2: MERGERS
Title 8: ICELAND
Title 9: INDIA
Title 10: ISRAEL
Title 11: JAPAN
Title 12: LIECHTENSTEIN
Title 13: MEXICO
Title 14: MOROCCO
Title 15: NEW ZEALAND
Title 16: NORWAY
Title 17: RUSSIA
Title 18: SINGAPORE
Title 19: SOUTH AFRICA
Title 20: SOUTH KOREA
Title 21: SWITZERLAND
Title 22: TURKEY
Title 23: UKRAINE
Title 24: UNITED KINGDOM
Title 25: USA
940. Abuse of a dominant position
1 minute de lecture
A dominant position is not necessarily anticompetitive. However, if a company uses its dominant position to exclude or exploit competitors or consumers, it is deemed to abuse its position and this practice is illegal.
According to Section 50 of Decree 2153 of 1992, when there is dominance, the following conducts constitute an abuse:
- selling below cost (predatory pricing);
- applying discriminato …