Document de travail

The Essential Facilities Doctrine: The Lost Message of Terminal Railroad

Stephen M. Maurer et Suzanne Scotchmer

Résumé

The growing importance of shared networks, shared platforms and shared standards leads to a renewed discussion of the essential facilities doctrine of antitrust. This is an area where European law and American law have diverged. In Trinko (2007), the U.S. Supreme Court came close to abolishing it. At the same time, it was reinvigorated by the European Commission, which asserted it successfully in E.C. v. Microsoft, and then, facing criticism, clarified the doctrine in a Guidance document. We harmonize the main cases around the doctrine’s original but often forgotten purpose namely, harvesting economic synergies through sharing. We argue that, absent such a doctrine, these synergies could be lost as firms either avoid sharing to avoid antitrust liability, or create sharing arrangements that undermine competition. We show how and why the original purpose of the doctrine has become entangled with other antitrust issues, in particular, leveraging. We systematize the sharing rules that have been imposed or allowed, with an emphasis on how to harvest synergies while mitigating any harm to competition.

Mots-clés

Competitions policy; antitrust; Sherman Act; essential facility;

Codes JEL

  • K21: Antitrust Law
  • L40: General
  • L41: Monopolization • Horizontal Anticompetitive Practices

Référence

Stephen M. Maurer et Suzanne Scotchmer, « The Essential Facilities Doctrine: The Lost Message of Terminal Railroad », TSE Working Paper, n° 14-476, 10 mars 2014.

Voir aussi

Publié dans

TSE Working Paper, n° 14-476, 10 mars 2014