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Proposals for amendment of antitrust law are under discussion both in Italy and in China. While the two countries are geographically distant jurisdictions, their proposed amendments pose some similarities: such as the need to strengthen and broaden sanctions for infringements of antitrust rules or the attempt to get jurisdiction over "killer acquisitions". The article provides a brief overview of the main changes awaited in both Italian and Chinese antitrust law while highlighting the similarities.
Interesting time ahead on the antitrust side as proposals for amendment are under discussion in many countries, including Italy and China.
Chinese antitrust is currently going through what are likely the most important changes encountered since its inception: an amendment of the Anti-Monopoly Law and the establishment of a new enforcement body.
Likewise, in Italy, the long-awaited proposal for an Annual Competition Law provides for radical changes for antitrust and merger control enforcement powers in Italy and pro-competitive developments for the Italian economy.
While Italy and China are geographically distant jurisdictions, the amendments proposed to both sets of laws pose certain interesting similarities: convergence does not come as a surprise as antitrust regulators in both countries grapple with similar issues such as the perceived need to strengthen and broaden sanctions for infringements of antitrust rules or the attempt to get jurisdiction over ‘killer acquisitions.’
The purpose of this article is to provide a brief overview of the main changes awaited in both Italian and Chinese antitrust law while highlighting the similarities.
As described in detail here on 23 October 2021, the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress – China’s legislature – published a draft revision of the Anti-Monopoly Law (AML) after its first reading (Draft).
The Draft brings about a major revision of the AML in three particular areas: anti-competitive agreements; merger control and sanctions.
In the agreements area, the major changes are related to:
In the merger control area, significant changes are underway as well, namely:
The largest impact of the Draft lies in the area of sanctions for anti-competitive conduct. The main changes which are provided for by the Draft include:
The reform package summarized above might be accompanied by an additional radical change announced on 15 November 2021: the creation of a new antitrust authority, the National Anti-Monopoly Bureau (NAMB).
As described more in detail here the Proposal for an Annual Competition Law (Italian Proposal) approved by the Italian Government on 4 November 2021 provides for, inter alia, a number of important changes in the antitrust enforcement area, including:
As regards the merger control area, the list of proposed changes includes:
Furthermore, this time of reform is further enhanced by the measures taken, through the Legislative Decree No 185 of 2021, by the Italian legislator for the implementation of Directive (EU) 2019/1, known as “ECN+” with a view to further harmonize the tools and powers at the disposal of the competition authorities of the Member States, including the ICA, and empowering them to be more effective enforcers (see the article) including, inter alia:
While, it remains to be seen which of these provisions will ultimately be transformed into law in the respective countries, it seems likely that milestone reforms of the Italian and Chinese competition law systems are approaching.
The most striking element of significant convergence is represented by the general objective pursued by both the Italian and Chinese legislator, namely, the clear and strong willingness to strengthen antitrust enforcement in the respective national markets.
The most direct and effective sign of the above is represented by the material increase of the level of pecuniary fines under consideration both in China and Italy (although in China this would be related to both substantive and procedural violations, while in Italy only in relation to the latter).
But that is not all. The antitrust crackdown underway at the two extremes of the silk road implicates the revision of one of the fundamental principle of both systems, namely the limitation of liability to legal entities. The “corporate veil” would no longer constitute an absolute shield for individuals though with at least one major difference: while in China the personal liability would concern substantive breaches of the law, in Italy it would be related to procedural infringements only. Nonetheless, the change remains radical and surprising, from the Italian perspective in particular, if one considers that personal liability for violation of antitrust rules is entirely extraneous to the EU body of rules enforced by the European Commission, i.e. the legal system with regard to which an alignment should take place.
In the merger field, changes introduced in both China and Italy reflect a recent, and growing, tendency to widen and enhance the ability of competition authorities to review transactions below thresholds where they are felt as possibly detrimental for competition.
The need to enhance competition authorities’ powers in respect of merger review has long been advocated, especially in the digital sphere, but it remains to be seen whether the cure is worse than the disease. Allowing competition authorities to review transactions below thresholds is capable to result in a high level of uncertainty regarding companies: an issue which in Italy is only minimally mitigated by the time limit provided for by the Italian Proposal, (i.e. ICA shall advance such request within a time frame of 6 months from closing)1.
On a similar note, the ability introduced for SAMR to stop-the-clock in merger review is a tool that is not unknown, especially for companies acquainted with EU merger rules, but it is again capable of injecting more uncertainty into the Chinese merger review process, which so far has been subject to fixed, unmovable deadlines.
On the bright side, some of aspects contained in the Italian Proposal in the merger area are certainly to be welcomed. First and foremost, the proposal to subject also the cooperative (full-function) joint venture to the merger control regime. In the current formulation of the law, for a joint venture to be subject to merger filing, in addition of being full function, it is necessary that it does not have as main object or effect a coordination between the parent companies. In the ICA’s practice, this principle has been applied following an unclear approach which made it difficult for companies to preliminary assess whether a joint venture fell within the category of concentration and consequently led to a number of decisions in which the transactions were found to be outside of the merger review scope2. This new proposal, if confirmed, will align the Italian approach to the one adopted at EU level.
Likewise, so much awaited is the alignment to EU law for the rules concerning turnover calculation for banks - as such would make easier for banks and financial institutions to carry out multijurisdictional analysis - and for the test applied to assess the competition impact of concentration. In this latter respect, the test so far adopted by the ICA to assess merger is primarily based on dominance; in fact according to art. 6 of Italian Law 287/1990 the relevant test entails the evaluation of whether a concentration determines the creation or strengthening of a dominant position so as to eliminate or reduce substantially and for a long time competition on the market. This test implied that the ICA must first assess the specific point on dominance and then evaluate the impact on the market. In practice, in its merger decisions, the ICA has conducted the review without formally distinguishing between the two phases of analysis and focusing on whether the transaction materially impacted on competition. Notwithstanding the fact that in practice the approach followed by the ICA was not too far away from the line adopted at EU level, the alignment of the law to the EU rules is certainly to be welcomed as it ensure that mergers will be assessed along the same lines both at national and EU level.
Authored by Aurora Muselli and Luigi Nascimbene.