CHANGING CONTOURS OF MERGER CONTROL: EXPLORING THE ENFORCEMENT GAP IN REGULATING NASCENT ACQUISITIONS
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
NLU Jodhpur
Abstract
This paper deals with the anticompetitive effects of nascent acquisitions. The
traditional approach in merger control is based on the turnover of the merging
entities, assets, and other notifiable requirements. More often than not,
acquisition involving nascent competitors do not meet the required thresholds,
and hence evade antitrust scrutiny. At other times, though the threshold of the
acquisition invokes the jurisdiction of the regulator, it escapes the liability due
to existing loopholes in the enforcement framework. The authors analyse the
peculiarity of major jurisdictions (US, EU, UK and India) in tackling the
issues involving nascent acquisitions, and attempt to locate the existing
enforcement gap within the larger debate of regulating nascent acquisitions.
Recent research and empirical data have shown the evolution of various theories
of harm with respect to nascent acquisitions. This paper specifically deals with
the Killer Acquisition theory and the Nascent Potential Acquisition theory.
The apprehension of harm caused by such acquisitions is prevalent in dynamic
markets, such as pharmaceutical markets and new-age digital markets. The
authors argue in this paper that the potential for harm in cases of nascent
acquisitions should be duly addressed and dealt with in order to ensure
continuous innovation in dynamic future markets.
Description
Citation
NLUJ Law Review (2021)
