Canadian Competition Law and Policy

Canadian Competition Law and Policy

Competition law is centred on the idea that competitive markets can efficiently and effectively deliver the goods, services, and economic growth that society desires. It seeks to promote the proper functioning of markets in order to deliver such benefits as low prices, consumer choice, and innovative products. This is done through provisions such as criminal offences for price fixing and other anti-competitive agreements between competitors, through the review of mergers that may prevent or lessen competition, and through remedies against dominant firms that may exclude competitors or create barriers to entry. Competition laws have gained importance internationally in recent decades, and are now present in over 130 jurisdictions worldwide.  Canadian Competition Law and Policy provides a succinct and accessible analysis of the Competition Act and related legislation, regulations, enforcement guidelines, and other guidance issued by the Competition Bureau. The discussion provides extensive case examples drawn from Canadian, American, European, and other competition law authorities to lluminate concepts and legal tests. The book seeks to offer students, lawyers, and others interested in the subject a practical guide to the context, objectives, and evolution of the Canadian competition law scheme by providing 
  • an overview of the jurisprudential and legislative history;  
  • an approachable outline of key economic concepts; and  
  • a review of methods and approaches applied by economists and lawyers to the analysis of competition law problems.  
While this book is focused on the law, the discussion also touches on topics related to the broader subject of competition policy, which deals with such matters as how competition legislation is designed and implemented, and its interplay with regulatory and other government policies that may affect the competitive market.  An emerging issue in this respect is the conduct of dominant firms in digital and data-driven markets, and the extent to which competition law is equipped to address this conduct or may need to adapt or change to do so. Canadian Competition Law and Policy addresses other fascinating and challenging examples of industry structures (such as oligopolistic markets) and market conduct (such as tied selling and predatory pricing) that require a blend of business, economics, law and related disciplines for their analysis.

Book details

About the author

John S. Tyhurst

John Tyhurst is currently a visiting professor at the University of Ottawa Faculty of Law, Common Law Section (English), where he teaches competition law. He practiced civil litigation, including competition law, at the Department of Justice in Ottawa for over thirty-two years. Born in Montreal and raised in Vancouver, he completed his BA in economics at the University of British Columbia, his LLB at the University of Toronto, and his LLM at McGill University as a recipient of a Duff-Rinfret Scholarship. He articled in Vancouver and then moved to Ottawa to practice with a consumer organization that intervened before various regulatory tribunals, including the CRTC and CITT. He participated in the process that led to watershed amendments to Canadian competition legislation in 1986. He then joined the Department of Justice, providing advice and litigation support to the Competition Bureau at the Departmental Legal Services Unit, where he practiced for ten years. During that period, he prosecuted criminal price fixing and bid-rigging cases, and appeared before the Competition Tribunal in civil merger, abuse of dominance, and vertical restraints cases as well as before the Federal Court of Appeal and Supreme Court of Canada. He moved to the Civil Litigation Section in 1997 to work on the first NAFTA Chapter 11 investor-state proceeding, and thereafter practiced a broad range of civil litigation, including trade, telecommunications, judicial review, and Indigenous law. He was a member of Department of Justice’s Supreme Court Practice Group, and appeared before the Supreme Court in competition law, tort, and Indigenous law cases. He appeared before other appellate courts, including the Federal and Ontario courts of appeal and conducted civil trials, arbitrations, and interventions as counsel for the Attorney General of Canada. In 2020 he was awarded the J Edward (Ted) Thompson, QC award for excellence in trial advocacy.

Reviews

No reviews have been written for this book.

You will also like

,

EPUB PDF