The Practitioner's Guide to Antitrust in China

· Kluwer Law International B.V.
Ebook
242
Pages

About this ebook

Management and legal counsel of foreign companies operating in China as well as those outside China with Chinese business desperately need to keep up with the fast-paced antitrust developments in the most dynamic market in the world.

The author of this book, Becky Koblitz, is a seasoned antitrust lawyer for a major U.S. law firm in Beijing. She has decades of legal experience as a prosecutor at the Antitrust Division of the U.S. Department of Justice, as well as in-house counsel for a German subsidiary of a major American real estate development company and as a lawyer at law firms globally. Her rich experience in the U.S., Europe and China, now often regarded as the three centers of global antitrust, makes her the perfect candidate to write a book on China's antitrust development.

Her book is a quick read that tells what there is to know about China's antitrust enforcement and includes practical advice and examples for the various aspects of antitrust: dealing with competitors, dealing within the supply chain, mergers, etc. She writes in a straight-forward language such that non-antitrust lawyers can get beyond stock phrases like "illicit price coordination," "abuse of dominance," or "unilateral effect." Her book is a valuable and practical "cookbook" for antitrust compliance training and beyond.

Another feature of the book is that it provides both legal and economic perspectives on antitrust analysis in China, which is important given that economic analysis is increasingly adopted by China's antitrust agencies and the Chinese courts. Thus understanding the logic and methodology behind economic analysis as applied to Chinese cases is key to conducting proper antitrust legal analysis that is tailored to the Chinese context.

To write a book on the burgeoning antitrust enforcement and practice for the constantly evolving Chinese market is a real challenge. The trick, and it is not as easy as you would think, is to write simple declarative sentences, understandable to the antitrust layman, and at the same time not lose the rigor of antitrust analysis. I think this relatively short book is a remarkable achievement in meeting such a challenge, but I invite you to judge for yourself.

About the author

Becky Koblitz is an American antitrust lawyer, whose life's path has brought her from the Antitrust Division at the Justice Department, to a corporate law firm in a Berlin still surrounded by the Berlin Wall, back to a corporate law firm in Washington, D.C., then to one of the largest property developers in a newly united Berlin, on to a law firm in Berlin practicing in financial transactions, and finally, for the last ten years, practicing corporate law in Beijing, China. She was born and raised in Tokyo, Japan and is a graduate of Stanford University and American University Law School. She was privileged to begin her legal career at the Antitrust Division working for Don Klawiter, later the chair of the American Bar Association's Section of Antitrust Law, prosecuting retail gasoline price-fixing cases, from grand jury to trials. She also reviewed merger filings in the energy sector of the Antitrust Division. Koblitz returned to her "antitrust roots" in Beijing as the only former federal prosecutor resident in China, where she manages and develops the antitrust, competition law and white-collar practices for the international law firm of Sheppard Mullin Richter & Hampton LLP. Her practice includes advising foreign companies on antitrust compliance as well as anti-corruption (FCPA) compliance, managing internal investigations and other measures to prevent or minimize risks.Becky Koblitz is a member of the Washington, D.C. bar (1982).

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