4.3 Article

Brandeis in Brussels? Bureaucratic discretion, social learning, and the development of regulated competition in the European Union

Journal

REGULATION & GOVERNANCE
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/rego.12570

Keywords

American antitrust; Brandeis; competition policy; EU; Europe; policy learning; progressive era

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Neo-Brandeisian legal scholars have found that Europe, rather than the United States, is more receptive to the ideas of Louis Brandeis. Through analyzing the development of EU competition law, it is evident that the EU's administrative system, with significant bureaucratic discretion, has led to a regulated competition system that aligns with the principles advocated by Brandeis.
Neo-Brandeisian legal scholars have recently revived the ideas of Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis, who championed state regulation that preserved market competition and economic liberty in the face of concentrated private power. Yet ultimately and perhaps paradoxically, it has been Europe and not the United States that has proved more hospitable to accommodating key features of the Brandeisian approach. We explain this outcome by tracing the evolution of EU competition law to gain insight into the social learning processes through which such regimes change over time. We argue that the EU's administrative system, which provides the European Commission with significant bureaucratic discretion, has facilitated processes of ongoing deliberative adjustment to policy and practice, which over time has resulted in a system of regulated competition with striking similarities to the Brandeisian vision. The analysis highlights how administrative law institutions condition how regulatory regimes evolve in response to acquired experience and knowledge.

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