FTC and DOJ Set to Ink Landmark Agreement with Chinese Counterparts
The U.S. Federal Trade Commission (“FTC”) and Department of Justice (“DOJ”) plan to sign a memorandum of understanding with China’s three antitrust enforcement agencies, signaling the first formal pact of cooperation between U.S. and Chinese regulators.
This deal comes on the heels of China’s sweeping antitrust reform, a policy it developed with advice from foreign agencies like the FTC. The growing number of countries with antitrust laws and agencies, combined with the increasingly global profile of corporations, has made international cooperation extremely important. Moreover, multi-jurisdiction, transnational antitrust investigations are now common, meaning that different agencies often have overlapping authority.
A formal memorandum of understanding facilitates agencies’ ability to share information, especially confidential documents. The FTC hopes this deal will bring international antitrust policy one step closer to a convergent set of global standards with consistent enforcement.
The U.S. shares similar agreements with a handful of other countries (Russia, Japan, Israel, and the E.U.) and intends to actively pursue new deals, especially with developing countries like India.
Categories: Antitrust Enforcement, Antitrust Policy, International Competition Issues