Empowering national competition authorities (NCAs)
Since 2003, national competition authorities (NCAs) have boosted the enforcement of EU competition and antitrust rules significantly. However, each year losses of €181-320 billion accrue because of undiscovered cartels, which increase prices by between 17 % and 30 % on average. In March 2017, the Commission proposed a new directive to ensure that all NCAs have effective investigation and decision-making tools, could impose deterrent fines, and have well-designed leniency programmes and enough resources to enforce EU competition rules independently. On 30 May 2018, Parliament and Council reached an agreement on the proposal in trilogue. It increases the independence, resources and powers of NCAs and envisages more harmonisation of the national leniency programmes and reduced burdens on undertakings. Parliament adopted the text on 14 November 2018, the final act was signed on 11 December 2018. Third edition. The ‘EU Legislation in Progress’ briefings are updated at key stages throughout the legislative procedure.
Briefing
À propos de ce document
Type de publication
Auteur
Mot-clé
- amende
- cartel
- concurrence
- concurrence
- construction européenne
- DROIT
- droit de l'UE-droit national
- droit de l'Union européenne
- droit de la concurrence
- droit pénal
- ENTREPRISE ET CONCURRENCE
- marché unique
- politique de la concurrence de l'UE
- position dominante
- procédure législative ordinaire
- proposition (UE)
- restriction à la concurrence
- secteur économique
- structure économique
- UNION EUROPÉENNE
- violation du droit de l'UE
- ÉCONOMIE