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Antitrust approvals hailed

By Bao Chang (China Daily) Updated: 2012-12-28 09:37

Record number of anti-monopoly cases settled since 2008: ministry

China had settled 154 anti-monopoly cases by mid-December and seen a record number of cases approved with conditions attached since 2008, the Ministry of Commerce said on Thursday.

The ministry's progress on antitrust work represented the country's increasing involvement in the global effort to protect fair market competition, experts said.

Antitrust approvals hailed

"Including another dozen cases that will be closed within the next two weeks, the number of antitrust cases the ministry settled in 2012 would have been the same as last year, and most involved manufacturing industries, including the petroleum, chemical, mechanical, automobile and shipping sectors," said Shang Ming, director at the ministry's anti-monopoly bureau.

"Most cases put on file in 2012 happened among competitors in similar industries," Shang added.

In 2011, the ministry settled 171 antitrust cases, with four approved with conditions attached.

"The ministry approved six antitrust cases with conditions attached in 2012, the most since 2008," Shang said. In 2008, only one case was approved.

Among the 154 antitrust cases settled by mid-December, 142 were approved with no conditions attached, accounting for 92 percent of the total.

Ning Wanglu, a senior fair trade official with the State Administration for Industry and Commerce, said that while China opens up the market further, it is confronting new challenges in maintaining fair market competition as more and more foreign, State and private investment flows into the country.

Sheng Jiemin, a Peking University law professor, said: "Instead of damaging foreign investment or multinational companies, China's antitrust legislation and progress on other anti-monopoly work aim to provide a better investment environment for foreign companies."

 

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