Beställningsvara. Skickas inom 3-6 vardagar. Fri frakt för medlemmar vid köp för minst 249 kr.
Johannes Persch untersucht, wie das EU-Wettbewerbsrecht Einschränkungen des Online-Vertriebs in vertikalen Vereinbarungen behandelt. Dabei analysiert er deren rechtliche und wirtschaftliche Auswirkungen und geht der Frage nach, ob das Konzept der Verbraucherautonomie einen sinnvollen Rahmen für das Verständnis und die Bewertung solcher Praktiken bietet.
Studied law at the University of Mannheim, graduating in 2016; Policy Officer at the European Commission's Directorate General for Competition in the Directorate for Policy and Strategy.
Introduction§ 1 Research questions§ 2 Outline§ 3 Terminology§ 4 Basics of behavioural economicsChapter 1: Treatment of vertical agreements under EU competition law and economic evaluation§ 1 Current assessment of vertical agreements under EU competition law§ 2 Economic evaluation of the EU's current rules on vertical agreements, particularly on online distribution§ 3 A comparative perspective: vertical agreements under US law§ 4 ConclusionChapter 2: A different explanation for the EU's stance on vertical agreements: consumer autonomy?§ 1 Consumer autonomy as an argumentative force behind the EU's approach to vertical agreements§ 2 Consumer autonomy as a goal of EU competition law§ 3 ConclusionChapter 3: Making autonomy workable in the context of vertical agreements§ 1 How can vertical agreements influence consumer decisions?§ 2 When do vertical agreements restrict competition based on consumer autonomy?§ 3 Implications for EU competition law§ 4 ConclusionSummary