
Tying in Digital Platforms under the Competition Legal Framework in China and the EU is an important study providing a comprehensive, systematic, and administrable legal test about how to weigh the dual competitive effects of tying arrangements in digital platforms, showing how two of the world’s largest trading economies—China and the EU—have integrated advantages of the U.S. economics while preserving their own cultural and social characteristics. In today’s digital markets, dominant firms often use tying (the practice of making the purchase of one product conditional on purchasing other products) as a mechanism to extend their dominance. Because the practice could generate both pro-competitive effects and anti-competitive effects, the distinction between lawful and unlawful tying is fraught with legal uncertainties.
What’s in this book:
Through case studies, the book, on the one hand, reveals how economic theories on tying are incorporated into legal frameworks, and, on the other hand, explores the underlying socio-cultural foundations of convergences and divergences between the two jurisdictions. In the course of its investigation, the book elucidates such issues and topics as the following:
How this will help you:
In its comparative law and economics analysis and its concrete guidance on how regulatory frameworks can incorporate economic analysis while navigating the tension with legal certainty, the book distills complex criteria into clear standards that can aid in formulating a context-sensitive framework for refining a competition policy of tying in the digital age. At the same time, the book offers of the social context and cultural reasons behind the emergence and existence of distinct legal rules in China and the EU. Practitioners, policymakers, and academics will gain useful insights for global antitrust dialogue and assess what can be done to foster innovation and pro-competitive tying while regulating anti-competitive tying in digital platforms.