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McMahon, Kathryn --- "Competition law and developing economies: between ‘informed divergence’ and international convergence" [2012] ELECD 1114; in Ezrachi, Ariel (ed), "Research Handbook on International Competition Law" (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2012) 209

Book Title: Research Handbook on International Competition Law

Editor(s): Ezrachi, Ariel

Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing

ISBN (hard cover): 9780857934796

Section: Chapter 9

Section Title: Competition law and developing economies: between ‘informed divergence’ and international convergence

Author(s): McMahon, Kathryn

Number of pages: 29

Abstract/Description:

In recent years an increasing number of developing and emerging economies have adopted, or are in the process of adopting, some form of competition legislation. This can be explained in part by studies that have found favourable links between the creation of strong competition regimes and the level of per capita GDP and economic growth. It is also true that the enactment of these regimes is not always the outcome of autonomous decision-making but rather is the result of external pressure to meet certain institutional requirements for membership in international organisations, loan conditionality or demands from donors, or as part of a package of reforms aimed at economic and social development. Such mechanisms may be implemented to attract Foreign Direct Investment (‘FDI’) and to ensure that trade liberalisation and the removal of price controls is not undermined by the creation of artificial barriers to entry, cartels and protectionist policies. While international development theory may have moved on from the purely market-oriented reforms emblematic of the Washington Consensus, a strong competition law is still seen as an essential arbiter of neoliberal market reforms and privatised assets. It also sends a powerful political message of membership in the ‘market economy club’. The new institutional economics also finds important linkages between institutional performance and economic growth. The foundations of democratisation and the rule of law, such as judicial independence and an appeal structure, are seen to have an important indirect effect on economic development via their impact on legality.


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