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Policy Dialogue
Does EU competition policy need reform?






EVENT
Thursday, 13 February 2020
EVENT PARTNERS

Speakers

Fabian Zuleeg
Chief Executive, European Policy Centre
Karin Lunning
Deputy Director General, Swedish Competition Authority
Maria Jaspers
Head of Unit Antitrust case support and policy, European Commission
Philippe Lambrecht
Chair of BusinessEurope Legal Affairs Committee Director-Secretary General, Federation of Enterprises in Belgium
Yves-Emmanuel Bara
Counsellor for Competition/State aid, French Permanent Representation to the European Union.




Moderator(S)

Marta Pilati
Policy Analyst, European Policy Centre


The panel, moderated by EPC analyst Marta Pilati, was composed by: Maria Jaspers, Head of Unit Antitrust case support and policy, European Commission - Karin Lunnin, Deputy Director General, Swedish Competition Authority - Philippe Lambrech, Chair of BusinessEurope Legal Affairs Committee Director-Secretary General, Federation of Enterprises in Belgium – Yves-Emmanuel Bara, Counsellor for Competition/State aid, French Permanent Representation to the European Union and Fabian Zuleeg Chief Executive, European Policy Centre.

The engaging discussion has acknowledged the success of the European Competition Policy so far, as it represents the backbone of the Single Market. Despite that, the huge changes in the international environment and the challenges European businesses are facing require a rethinking of the Competition Policy.

From Chinese state owned enterprises and subsidies, the need to assure a level playing field, to digital transformation, including AI, with all its implications for the strategic autonomy, the EU has to adapt its regulatory framework. Among the panellists there was broad agreement that some changes to competition policy are needed in the short term to ensure its fitness to a changing economy.

However, many questions on how to achieve this are still open and unanswered. There are already proposals from Member States for a renovated competition policy: the Franco – German manifesto and the Dutch proposal. The Commission will soon deliver a new industrial strategy which needs to be linked to competition policy and its possible reforms.

Among the panellists there was broad agreement that some changes to competition policy are needed in the short term to ensure its fitness to a changing economy. However, many questions on how to achieve this are still open and unanswered. There are already proposals from Member States for a renovated competition policy: the Franco – German manifesto and the Dutch proposal.

The Commission will soon deliver a new industrial strategy which needs to be linked to competition policy and its possible reforms. 



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