Abstract
The paper focuses on the application of competition law in HK and China to buying alliances and buyer cartels in intermediate markets. The discussion set to clarify the legality, under the competition provisions, of purchase price fixing agreements between buyers.
Published Online: 2014-12-4
Published in Print: 2014-1-1
©2013 by De Gruyter
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Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Preface to Special Issue
- Socio-legal Scholarship on Southeast Asia: Themes and Directions
- Articles
- Charting Socio-Legal Scholarship on Southeast Asia: Key Themes and Future Directions
- Revolution Imagined: Cause Advocacy, Consumer Rights, and the Evolving Role of NGOs in Thailand
- New Transnational Governance and the Changing Composition of Regulatory Pluralism in Southeast Asia
- The Conceptualisation of Pro Bono in Singapore
- Alliances and Contestations in the Legal Production of Space: The Case of Bali
- The Philippine Supreme Court and Regime Response, 1970–2000
- Comparative Law, Anti-essentialism and Intersectionality: Reflections from Southeast Asia in Search of an Elusive Balance
- Historicising “Law” as a Language of Progress and Its Anomalies: The Case of Penal Law Reforms in Colonial India
- Is Japan Ready for Enduring Powers? A Comparative Analysis of Enduring Powers Reform
- Controlling Shareholders: Issues and Challenges for Shareholders’ Empowerment in Directors’ Remuneration in Corporate Malaysia
- Competition Law and the Regulation of Buyer Power and Buyer Cartels in China and Hong Kong
- Dishonest Assistance in Singapore and Malaysia since Barlow Clowes
- A Bolder Step towards Privacy Protection in Hong Kong: A Statutory Cause of Action
- Book Review
- Jie Huang: Interregional Recognition and Enforcement of Civil and Commercial Judgments
Schlagwörter für diesen Artikel
buyer power;
competition law;
buyer cartel;
purchase price fixing;
buying alliance
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Preface to Special Issue
- Socio-legal Scholarship on Southeast Asia: Themes and Directions
- Articles
- Charting Socio-Legal Scholarship on Southeast Asia: Key Themes and Future Directions
- Revolution Imagined: Cause Advocacy, Consumer Rights, and the Evolving Role of NGOs in Thailand
- New Transnational Governance and the Changing Composition of Regulatory Pluralism in Southeast Asia
- The Conceptualisation of Pro Bono in Singapore
- Alliances and Contestations in the Legal Production of Space: The Case of Bali
- The Philippine Supreme Court and Regime Response, 1970–2000
- Comparative Law, Anti-essentialism and Intersectionality: Reflections from Southeast Asia in Search of an Elusive Balance
- Historicising “Law” as a Language of Progress and Its Anomalies: The Case of Penal Law Reforms in Colonial India
- Is Japan Ready for Enduring Powers? A Comparative Analysis of Enduring Powers Reform
- Controlling Shareholders: Issues and Challenges for Shareholders’ Empowerment in Directors’ Remuneration in Corporate Malaysia
- Competition Law and the Regulation of Buyer Power and Buyer Cartels in China and Hong Kong
- Dishonest Assistance in Singapore and Malaysia since Barlow Clowes
- A Bolder Step towards Privacy Protection in Hong Kong: A Statutory Cause of Action
- Book Review
- Jie Huang: Interregional Recognition and Enforcement of Civil and Commercial Judgments