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Chapter 9 - The Criminalisation of EU Competition Law
- from PART III - INSIDER TRADING, CARTELS AND CRIMINALISATION
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- By Sabina Zgaga, Assistance professor at the University of Maribor, Faculty of criminal justice and security (Slovenia)
- Edited by Kovac Mitja, Vandenberghe Ann-Sophie
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- Book:
- Economic Evidence in EU Competition Law
- Published by:
- Intersentia
- Published online:
- 21 September 2018
- Print publication:
- 22 February 2016, pp 177-202
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- Chapter
- Export citation
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Summary
INTRODUCTION
European and national competition law prohibits acts restricting competition and thereby defines the limit between the lawful and unlawful acts of competition. According to the legal theory, the primary rules are, defining the required action or the prohibited action. European and national competition law, however, includes also secondary rules, which define the unlawful restriction of competition and sanctions for such conduct. According to the Slovenian Prevention of the Restriction of Competition Act-1 (ZPOmK-1) the unlawful restriction of competition and, thereby violations of primary rules are classified as misdemeanours, for which the undertakings and their responsible persons could be held responsible. Violation of competition law could be classified also as a criminal act, defined by Slovenian national criminal legislation or potentially even European law. Two separate, but also intertwined forms of legal responsibility could therefore arise in the case of the restriction of competition.
This chapter aims to analyse the arguments for regulating and enforcing criminal responsibility in addition to the responsibility for misdemeanours in cases of unlawful restriction of competition in Slovenia and to critically assess current Slovenian legislation. Slovenia namely already defines unlawful restriction of competition as a criminal act in the Criminal Code-1 (KZ-1).
With this aim, the first part of this paper analyses the legislation of the European Union (hereinafter EU), Constitution of the Republic of Slovenia (hereinafter Constitution) and criminal policy in search of potential supranational, constitutional, and policy arguments in favour of the implementation of criminalisation of competition law.
The next part of the paper focuses on current Slovenian regulation concerning the restriction of competition and certain interesting issues, such as the relation between criminal and misdemeanour responsibility of natural and legal persons, the definition of the perpetrator and accomplices to the criminal act of unlawful restriction of competition and leniency institutes, incorporated in Slovenian criminal procedural and substantive law.
IS SLOVENIA OBLIGED TO CRIMINALLY PROSECUTE RESTRICTION OF COMPETITION?
SUPRANATIONAL REASONS FOR CRIMINALISATION OF RESTRICTION OF COMPETITION
As a member of the EU Slovenia has a duty to implement EU law.