«il n’y a pas de lois, il n’y a que des circonstances»
Honoré de Balzac
1. Introduction
The European Commission (hereinafter, the ‘Commission’) does not enjoy deference on the interpretation of legal provisions. Under the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (hereinafter, ‘TFEU’), it is for the Court of Justice (hereinafter, the ‘Court’ or the ‘ECJ’) to state what the law is and to decide how it applies to the facts of a case.Footnote 1 While uncontroversial, this feature of the European Union (hereinafter, ‘EU’) legal order is more easily stated in the abstract than implemented in specific scenarios. The gap between theory and practice is likely to become apparent where complex technical and/or economic assessments are involved. In such instances, it may not be easy to disentangle the legal interpretation of a provision from the said complex assessments. The former and the latter, in other words, may be treated as one and the same issue. Establishing whether an undertaking holds a dominant position within the meaning of Article 102 TFEU, for instance, demands the definition of the relevant market and an analysis of its characteristics.Footnote 2 These exercises require, in turn, the use of economic tools to identify the constraints to which the undertaking is subject. As a result, the interpretation of the legal concept may be inseparable from such tools.
The intertwinement between, respectively, issues of law and complex assessments has significant consequences. The Court has long recognised that the Commission enjoys deference (or, if one prefers, a ‘margin of discretion’) in relation to the latter.Footnote 3 As a result of this doctrine, two different standards of review may coexist in relation to a single issue: full review applying to points of law (for instance, the legal definition of dominance), and limited review to any related complex assessments (for instance, the tools relied upon to define the relevant market and the conclusions drawn from the use of such tools). The question that emerges, against this background, is whether it is realistic to expect that the two standards of review can be implemented in tandem or whether, instead, one will inevitably exercise its gravitational pull over the other. There is, more specifically, a risk that, as a result of the intertwinement, the Commission is given deference when construing legal provisions and applying them in individual factual scenarios. Even though, formally speaking, such points of law would be subject to full review, they would, in practice, be controlled only for manifest errors.
EU merger control is an area where legal issues and complex assessments are often difficult to disentangle and thus provides a useful case study. Under the regime created by virtue of Regulation 139/2004,Footnote 4 concentrations are incompatible with the internal market where they would significantly impede effective competition.Footnote 5 In and of itself, this substantive standard (‘significant impediment to effective competition’, hereinafter ‘SIEC’) is not operational. It needs to be fleshed out around a set of workable factors. The application of these factors in specific factual scenarios, in turn, may require complex economic assessments. Determining whether two parties to a transaction are ‘close competitors’, for instance, can only be meaningfully evaluated by examining in detail the features and dynamics of the relevant market. To the extent that complex assessments are involved, the Commission may well enjoy, de facto, deference on whether a concentration would amount to a SIEC (which, again, is in principle subject to full review).
This paper considers the issue of effective judicial review in EU merger control under Regulation 139/2004. In CK Telecoms, the Court had the chance to define, for the first time, how the SIEC test applies in the context of concentrations that would not create or strengthen a dominant position.Footnote 6 The ruling held that the Commission enjoys no deference on issues of law, whether these relate to the SIEC test itself or to the factors into which the test is broken down (which include whether the parties are close competitors and whether the transaction involves an important competitive force).Footnote 7 The interpretation of these factors (and their legal characterisation) is subject to full review. On the other hand, the Court did not clarify how legal issues are to be construed and applied, and, similarly, how one can ensure that administrative action remains subject to full review in practice. It simply held that the interpretation given by the General CourtFootnote 8 (hereinafter, the ‘GC’ or the ‘first-instance court’) was incorrect in law and referred the case back to it. As a result, the question remains open and unresolved at the time of writing.
It is submitted that some approaches to the interpretation of the SIEC test could transform the nature and intensity of judicial review in EU merger control. Following CK Telecoms, substance-based review may give way to process-oriented scrutiny, which is inevitably confined to manifest errors of assessment. Judicial review may shift in nature and intensity, first, if the administrative authority is given the discretion to decide, case-by-case, the factors against which the lawfulness of a transaction is evaluated. The transformation may also occur, second, where the content of each of the legal terms does not have an autonomous meaning that can be discerned ex ante. Where the meaning of a concept can only be figured out ex post (that is, by characterising the facts at hand), it may not be possible to disentangle the legal interpretation from the associated complex assessments. For the same reason, this interpretative choice would turn an issue of law into one over which the Commission enjoys discretion. If either of these two approaches were followed, there is a risk that the question before the EU courts, in practice, is no longer whether the authority has correctly interpreted and applied the SIEC test, but whether its assessment of the transaction is a reasonable one and whether it has taken into account all the relevant factors.
These ideas are presented and organised hereinafter as follows. Section 2 provides an overview of the substantive aspects of EU merger control and its distinctive features. It presents the SIEC test, addresses the rationale behind its introduction and explains how it can only be made operational by breaking it down into a number of criteria. Section 3 moves to an analysis of CK Telecoms and explains the substantive disagreement between the GC and the Court. Section 4, in turn, addresses the potential gap that might emerge between theory and practice in the aftermath of the judgement. In principle, CK Telecoms confirms that issues of substantive law are subject to full review. In effect, however, deference and process-oriented scrutiny might become the de facto reality of judicial scrutiny in the wake of that ruling. Section 5, finally, discusses whether, and to what extent, this shift might be desirable or justified in the current economic and technological landscape.
2. EU merger control under the SIEC test
A. The SIEC test: rationale and challenge
Under Regulation 139/2004, the compatibility of mergers with the internal market is assessed against the SIEC test. As mentioned in the introduction, the relevant substantive question is whether the transaction would significantly impede effective competition.Footnote 9 The SIEC test marked a break with the previous regime, which revolved around the concept of dominance. Under Regulation 4064/89, the Commission had to prove that the concentration would affect competition as a result of the creation or the strengthening of a dominant position,Footnote 10 whether individually or collectively held.Footnote 11 The SIEC test is broader than the preceding one in the sense that it allows for intervention even absent the creation or strengthening of a dominant position. For instance, a transaction can be declared to be incompatible with the internal market even when the new entity would not even be the market leader in the post-merger scenario.Footnote 12
The shift to the SIEC test is explained by a concern that the dominance-based standard was underinclusive and thus opened an ‘oligopoly gap’.Footnote 13 The argument, more precisely, was that there are some markets (namely non-collusive oligopoliesFootnote 14 ) where competition can be significantly affected even when a concentration is unlikely to create or strengthen a dominant position.Footnote 15 In the same vein, it was argued that Regulation 4064/89 was not in line with the mainstream consensus. From an economic perspective, there is indeed no reason to expect or assume that concentrations only harm competition where they lead to, or reinforce, a dominant position. What matters is whether the change in the market structure results in a deterioration of the conditions of competition in the relevant market(s) affected by it.Footnote 16
The dominance-based test might have been defective from an economic standpoint but had a clear advantage from a legal one. The notion of dominance, whether individual or collective, had relatively well-defined boundaries at the time of the adoption of the merger control regime. Since the notion is also enshrined in Article 102 TFEU, it had a long history of enforcement behind it when Regulation 4064/89 entered into force.Footnote 17 As a result, the Court had already been presented with the opportunity to flesh out the conceptFootnote 18 and define proxies for it.Footnote 19 The SIEC test, by contrast, was a legal innovation for which there were no obvious precedents. There were several reasons, moreover, why the new substantive standard could be a source of legal uncertainty. As the EU legislature explains in the Preamble to the Regulation, a SIEC encompasses instances in which the degree of market power is significant, but not necessarily significant enough for it to give rise to dominance.Footnote 20 The theoretical and practical challenge, against this background, was (and remains) to identify the requisite degree of market power that triggers the application of Regulation 139/2004 (and, similarly, to draw the line between significant and insignificant impediments to effective competition).
Delimiting the substantive scope of the SIEC test is particularly challenging in relation to mergers with a horizontal aspect – that is, transactions involving actual or potential competitors in one or more markets.Footnote 21 These operations eliminate, by their very nature, a source of competitive pressure. In other words, they strengthen, at least to some degree, the market power of the parties.Footnote 22 Therefore, every transaction with a horizontal dimension can be seen as prima facie problematic under Regulation 139/2004. The assessment of their compatibility with the internal market hinges, in practice, on whether the (inevitable) increase in market power to which they lead is ‘significant’ within the meaning of the SIEC test. The approach followed by the Commission to define this concept, and, in the same vein, the criteria used to distinguish between significant and insignificant impediments to effective competition is of paramount importance under the regime.
B. Making the SIEC test operational
The Commission has operationalised the SIEC test by means of soft law instruments that break down the substantive standard into workable building blocks. Both the Guidelines on horizontalFootnote 23 and non-horizontal mergersFootnote 24 identify two broad reasons why a concentration could significantly impede effective competition: transactions can lead to either coordinated or non-coordinated effects. The former (coordinated effects) concern, in essence, a scenario of collective dominance, the boundaries of which were defined by the GC in Airtours.Footnote 25 More importantly for the purposes of the analysis that follows, the (cumulative) conditions laid down in that judgement have a clear meaning that is discernible ex ante and that is known to be stringent. As a result, the so-called Airtours criteria do not give rise to the sort of concerns on which this piece focuses.
The latter instance (non-coordinated effects), by contrast, was a relative novelty in the legal landscape, even though it shares some commonalities with the analysis of effects under Article 101(1) TFEU.Footnote 26 A (horizontal or non-horizontal) concentration gives rise to non-coordinated effects where it strengthens the market power of a firm to such an extent that it significantly affects the dynamics of competition. Where the transaction has a horizontal dimension (and thus involves actual or potential competitors), non-coordinated effects result from the elimination of a competitive constraint on the relevant market. The effects are, in other words, the very consequence of the transaction.Footnote 27 When the transaction is a possible source of non-horizontal concerns, on the other hand, non-coordinated effects, if manifested, will be triggered by the conduct of the new entity. Where the relevant markets are vertically related, the said entity may engage in a strategy of input or customer foreclosure;Footnote 28 where they are horizontally related, foreclosure might result from a tying or bundling strategy.Footnote 29
The analysis that follows focuses on non-coordinated effects arising from mergers involving actual or potential competitors (that is, mergers with a horizontal dimension). The Guidelines on horizontal mergers (hereinafter, the ‘Guidelines’) identify several factors against which the Commission commits to assessing the likelihood of a SIEC. These factors include the market shares of the parties (the higher the market share, the more likely the negative effects),Footnote 30 the closeness of competition (the impediment to effective competition being more probable where the parties are close competitors),Footnote 31 whether customers have the ability to switch suppliersFootnote 32 (the exercise of market power can be expected in the aftermath of the operation if they do not), whether competitors have the ability to react to the conduct of the new entity (which may not be the case where the former would be unable to expand capacityFootnote 33 or where the latter would have the ability to hinder their expansionFootnote 34 ), and, finally, whether the transaction involves an important competitive forceFootnote 35 (that, is a so-called ‘maverick’, the elimination of which affects market dynamics more than its modest position might suggest).
The conclusions based on these factors may then be corrected in light of other considerations, which relate to the features of the relevant market. Even when the analysis suggests, prima facie, that the transaction would lead to non-coordinated effects, an impediment to effective competition may not materialise, first, where the parties face strong constraints on either the buyer or the seller side.Footnote 36 In such an instance, the exercise of countervailing power may not allow the parties to exercise market power in the post-merger scenario. Second, non-coordinated effects cannot be expected to result from a transaction where entry is ‘sufficiently easy’, in the sense that it is likely and sufficiently timely so that the mere prospect of a new player restricts the ability and incentive of existing players to significantly affect the relevant parameters of competition (Figure 1).Footnote 37

Figure 1. The SIEC test under Regulation 139/2004.
C. The interpretation and application of the factors
There are three key aspects about the Commission’s approach to the abovementioned factors that are worth emphasising. First, the Guidelines note that each of the factors, considered in isolation, are not necessarily sufficient to substantiate a finding of non-coordinated effects.Footnote 38 Therefore, they will be typically assessed in combination with one another. Second, the Commission takes the view that a finding of non-coordinated effects need not consider every factor in each transaction.Footnote 39 One consequence of this approach is that the criteria against which the compatibility of a merger is assessed may change from operation to operation. For instance, the analysis in one case may rely on the parties’ market share and on the fact that they are close competitors; in another, the authority may place an emphasis on the status of one of them as a ‘maverick’.
The third aspect that is worth emphasising has to do with the fact that none of the factors identified in the Guidelines has clear, hard boundaries that can be discerned ex ante. In other words, there is no threshold of significance in relation to any of them. Consider ‘closeness of competition’. The Guidelines do not identify the requisite degree of closeness that would make it possible to draw the line between significant and insignificant impediments to effective competition. They do not present the issue as a binary one – whereby the parties are either significantly close competitors or they are not – but as one of degree, to be assessed on a case-by-case basis.Footnote 40 Similarly, the Guidelines mention that a transaction is more likely to impede effective competition where it involves an ‘important competitive force’. However, the Commission does not identify any operational criteria, other than the fact that the influence of a ‘maverick’ on the market may be greater than its market share might suggest.Footnote 41
These three aspects, taken together, raise the question of whether they could give, in effect, something akin to de facto deference to the Commission when it evaluates mergers involving actual or potential competitors. This is so, to begin with, because the Guidelines follow an approach that allows the authority to decide, case-by-case, the benchmark against which the compatibility of transactions is assessed. In the same vein, it is an approach that does not give the merging parties the chance to argue that other factors, potentially casting doubts on the finding of a SIEC, should have been considered in the assessment. What is more, the nebulous boundaries of each of the factors are inextricably linked to the particularities of each case. In other words, the line between significant and insignificant impediments can only be determined ex post, once the assessment is performed.
The leeway which, by design, the Guidelines give to the authority may have the practical effect of turning an issue of law into one of policy. Merger control would revolve around policy in the sense that the decision of which transactions to prohibit and which to allow would not be determined and constrained by law, but by the enforcement priorities defined by the administrative authority. Concerns that the Commission’s approach may give it discretion in relation to horizontal transactions were, in fact, raised by practitioners in the years that followed the adoption of Regulation 139/2004. Venit, for instance, expressed the view that the authority’s approach ‘substantially reduces’ the ‘evidentiary burden’ to which it is subject.Footnote 42 This commentator contrasted, in this sense, the Airtours conditions, which are cumulative and are discernible ex ante, with the way the Commission performed the assessment of non-horizontal effects under the SIEC test.Footnote 43
The consequences of the Commission’s approach to the assessment of horizontal mergers became apparent in Hutchison 3G UK/Telefónica UK.Footnote 44 The authority reiterated in its decision some of the key aspects of the philosophy permeating the Guidelines. First, it explained that the compatibility of a transaction need not consider every single one of the factors (which, in any event are not exhaustive).Footnote 45 Second, the Commission emphasised that the relevance of each factor is assessed along a continuum, not as binary options. Therefore, two parties can be deemed close competitors within the meaning of the Guidelines without necessarily being the closest competitors.Footnote 46 Similarly, an important competitive force need not be a ‘particularly important’ one and thus need not stand out relative to the constraints imposed by other players.Footnote 47
3. The EU courts’ interpretation of the SIEC test in CK Telecoms
A. The substantive criteria defined by the GC
In May 2020, the GC delivered its ruling in CK Telecoms, which annulled the Commission decision in Hutchison 3G UK/Telefónica UK.Footnote 48 The contributions it made in relation to the requisite standard of proof and the role and relevance of economic analysis have been widely discussed by commentators.Footnote 49 Arguably, the single most important conversation that the judgement started, and the one on which the remainder of the paper focuses, has to do with the way in which the GC construed the substantive factors around which the assessment of horizontal transactions revolves. The first-instance court departed from the Commission’s interpretation insofar as it placed meaningful substantive boundaries when defining the SIEC test. In this sense, the judgement specifies the requisite degree of significance justifying a finding of incompatibility.
According to the GC, for instance, it would not be enough to show that the parties are close competitors, as the Commission argued in its decision. It would be necessary to prove that they are particularly close competitors; that is, that there is something about the competitive relationship between the parties that is qualitatively different from the relationship that exists with other oligopolists. Two parties to a transaction could be seen as particularly close competitors, pursuant to the GC’s interpretation, where their products are seen as the only two meaningful substitutes for one another.Footnote 50 Such scenario would arise, for instance, where the merging firms target the same niche of customersFootnote 51 or where the customers of one of the parties only contemplate switching to the other (Figure 2).Footnote 52

Figure 2. (1) and (2): ‘Closeness of competition’ as interpreted by the Commission (top) and the GC (bottom).
Similarly, the GC held that it would not be sufficient to prove that the ‘maverick’ involved in the concentration is an ‘important competitive force’. According to this interpretation, the authority would be required to establish that the said ‘maverick’ is a ‘particularly important’ competitive force, in the sense that the competitive pressure it exercises stands out from that coming from the rest of rivals.Footnote 53 According to this interpretation, a ‘maverick’ within the meaning of the SIEC test would not just be a firm that adds more dynamism than its market share might suggest. It would be the primary responsible for disciplining the behaviour of the rest of oligopolists. This situation could arise, for instance, where the ‘maverick’ is the late comer to a market with well-established players and therefore has to compete particularly aggressively to improve its position (Figure 3).Footnote 54

Figure 3. (1) and (2): ‘Maverick firm’ as interpreted by the Commission (top) and the GC (bottom).
The GC was explicit about why the appropriate interpretation of the SIEC test demands the delineation of clear substantive boundaries in relation to each of the factors. It pointed out, in this sense, that the Commission’s interpretation of the various factors would allow it to establish a SIEC in any oligopolistic market (which is tantamount to saying in virtually any market).Footnote 55 If it is accepted, for instance, that an ‘important competitive force’ need not stand out from the rest of rivals, every single firm within an oligopoly could potentially meet this condition. Similarly, every single horizontal merger would be problematic if it were accepted that the parties to the transaction need not be ‘particularly close’ competitors. If the relevance of this factor is assessed along a continuum (as the Commission argued in its decision), it would always be possible to conclude that there is, at least to some extent, closeness of competition between the parties (and thus always possible to establish a SIEC). This is particularly true, the GC explains, in oligopolistic markets such as the one at stake in Hutchison 3G UK/Telefónica UK, which are characterised by a low degree of product differentiation.Footnote 56
In addition to fleshing out each of the individual factors laid down in the Guidelines, the GC introduced an overarching test to establish whether the non-coordinated effects resulting from a horizontal merger can be expected to lead to a SIEC. According to the GC’s interpretation of Regulation 139/2004, the Commission would need to show that the transaction would lead to the elimination of ‘important competitive constraints’ that the merging parties had exerted upon each other and that, in addition, it would lead to a reduction of the competitive pressure to which remaining competitors are subject. These two criteria were derived by the GC from the Preamble to Regulation 139/2004, and more precisely from Recital 25.Footnote 57 The judgement specifically noted that this overarching test is not to be confused or conflated with the factors defined by the Commission in its Guidelines.Footnote 58
The definition of an overarching test served three purposes in the analytical framework crafted by the GC. First, it ensures that not every horizontal merger amounts to a SIEC merely because it entails the loss of (some degree of) competitive pressure.Footnote 59 By requiring that the elimination of a competitive constraint be an ‘important’ one, it emphasises that the impediment to effective competition must be shown to be ‘significant’. The introduction of the overarching test means, second, that the individual factors are to be measured against a single overarching goal and are not examined in isolation. In addition, third, the test informs the fleshing out of individual factors. Because it demands that the constraints that the parties exerted upon each other be ‘important’, it would not be enough to show, for instance, that they were close competitors. They must be shown to be, in addition, ‘particularly’ close ones.
B. The Court ruling in CK telecoms
The ECJ set aside the GC ruling in CK Telecoms and referred the case back to the latter.Footnote 60 The appeal judgement followed, by and large, Advocate General Kokott’s Opinion.Footnote 61 To begin with, the Court rejected the overarching test proposed by the GC.Footnote 62 By doing so, it brought the assessment back to the analytical framework sketched in Figure 1 (and rejected the extra step depicted in Figure 4). The ECJ advanced two main reasons in support of its conclusion. The need to preserve the effectiveness of the EU merger control regime is one of them. In addition, it argued that requiring the Commission to show not just that the transaction eliminates important competitive constraints placed upon each other but also that it would reduce the competitive pressure on remaining players would mean that the strengthening of the market power of the new entity in the post-merger scenario would be insufficient, in and of itself, to justify a finding of a SIEC.Footnote 63 Such an outcome, the judgement suggests, goes against the letter and logic of Regulation 139/2004.Footnote 64

Figure 4. The GC’s analytical framework in CK Telecoms.
Concerning the interpretation of the Guidelines, and the individual factors contained therein, the Court rejected the Commission’s argument pursuant to which the administrative authority benefits from a margin of discretion when interpreting the meaning of concepts such as those of ‘important competitive force’ and ‘closeness of competition’. The judgement noted, in this sense, that an administrative authority does not enjoy deference when construing the scope of legal provisions, including the substantive test enshrined in Regulation 139/2004.Footnote 65 In this sense, it neatly distinguished between points of law, the interpretation of which is subject to full review, and complex assessments, which are only controlled for manifest errors.Footnote 66 The Court pointed out, moreover, that the EU courts are in no way constrained by the choices made by the Commission, which is the only one bound by its own soft law instruments.Footnote 67
On the other hand, the Court concluded that the interpretation of the factors by the GC was incorrect in law. Contrary to what the first-instance court had held, the ECJ ruled that an ‘important competitive force’ (or ‘maverick’) within the meaning of the Guidelines need not be a ‘particularly important’ one. Therefore it would not be necessary to show that the competitive pressure it exerts is particularly aggressive.Footnote 68 Instead, the Court concurred with the interpretation given by the Commission, whereby the characterisation of a firm as a ‘maverick’ is appropriate whenever the influence of the undertaking on the competitive process is more important than its market share might suggest.Footnote 69 In a similar vein, the ECJ ruled that it cannot be excluded that more than a single firm qualifies as an ‘important competitive force’.Footnote 70 Again, considerations pertaining to the effectiveness of the merger control regime weighed in this interpretation.Footnote 71
The Court interpreted the other factor, namely closeness of competition, in a similarly expansive manner. Contrary to what the GC had held, the ECJ ruled that it is not necessary to show that two parties are ‘particularly close competitors’ for this factor to be relevant in the assessment.Footnote 72 According to the appeal judgement, a transaction could lead to a SIEC even when there is not a ‘very high degree of substitutability’ between the products offered by the merging undertakings.Footnote 73 The Commission may take this factor into account, the Court explained, provided that the degree of substitutability of the products offered by the parties is higher in relative terms.Footnote 74 Therefore, and in line with the Advocate General’s position, the judgement suggests that the factor must be assessed along a continuum, whereby a higher degree of closeness would point to a SIEC, while a lower degree would point to the opposite.Footnote 75
Finally, the Court concluded that the GC had erred in law by failing to engage in an overall evaluation of the Commission’s assessment of the likelihood of a SIEC. This point is particularly relevant in that it sheds light on the purpose and scope of judicial review. According to the appeal judgement, the GC must consider whether the contested decision, taken in its entirety, has established a SIEC to the requisite legal standard.Footnote 76 Accordingly, ruling that the Commission has erred in law when interpreting one or several of the factors enshrined in the Guidelines does not justify, in and of itself, the annulment of a decision. The first-instance court would need to ascertain, in addition, whether, in light of the assessment by the Commission in relation to other factors (not challenged and therefore deemed established), it could still be argued that the transaction would amount to a SIEC. Since the GC had failed to consider several arguments raised by the authority in its decision, the Court referred the case back to it.Footnote 77
The appeal judgement in CK Telecoms emphasises the importance of an effective EU merger control regime. On the other hand, the Court does not appear to give much weight to a consideration that was central in the GC’s assessment, namely that the approach enshrined in the Guidelines could turn, in effect, an issue of law into one of policy. As mentioned above, the first-instance judgement had concluded that the Commission had construed the substantive test in such a way that virtually every horizontal transaction would amount to a SIEC. While this question does not feature in the appeal judgement, it was addressed by Advocate General Kokott in her Opinion. She rejected its relevance, however, on two grounds. She noted, first, that the Commission has not systematically prohibited every horizontal merger since the entry into force of Regulation 139/2004; and second, that this argument is ultimately about placing a higher standard of proof in relation to mergers that do not create or strengthen a dominant position.Footnote 78
These arguments do not address the issue of de facto discretion. They are useful, however, in that they reveal that the theoretical and practical significance of the concerns raised by the GC may not always be fully appreciated. Contrary to what is suggested by the Advocate General, the fact that the interpretation of a legal provision gives, in effect, discretion to an administrative authority does not mean that it will be exercised to systematically prohibit every transaction. It simply means that the authority will have the leeway to decide which transactions are incompatible with the internal market and which are not, and this without being meaningfully constrained by law. The reference to the standard of proof in the Opinion, in turn, reveals a tendency, relatively widespread in the community, to conflate issues of substance (such as the meaning of the SIEC test) and issues of evidence (such as the requisite standard of proof).Footnote 79
4. Judicial review after CK Telecoms: full review or deference on issues of law?
A. The intensity of judicial review after the appeal judgement: theory
Full judicial review of issues of law
At first sight, the landscape of judicial review in EU merger control seems straightforward. Full review applies both to the interpretation of the SIEC test as such and to the individual factors into which the test is broken down. As explained above, the Court rejected the idea that the Commission should be given deference in relation to the latter. Insofar as they are ‘concepts of EU law’,Footnote 80 it is incumbent upon the EU courts to define their meaning, and not simply to verify whether the Commission has committed a manifest error of assessment when fleshing them out. In one respect, the Court’s position is uneventful. It reiterates the doctrine defined in landmarks such as Kali & Salz,Footnote 81 Airtours Footnote 82 and Tetra Laval,Footnote 83 whereby it is for the EU courts to delineate the legal boundaries of EU merger control – including, inter alia, the meaning of collective dominance or the definition of the instances where a conglomerate merger leads to a SIEC.
In another respect, the Court’s reiteration of this line of case law is valuable and relevant. The current economic and technological climate favours an expansive understanding of the substantive limits of the EU merger control regime. Specifically, there have been calls for the Commission to explore the application of emerging doctrines that either tackle relatively neglected harms in the past (such as the impact of concentrations on labour marketsFootnote 84 ) or adjust to novel realities. Much ink has been spilled, for instance, on so-called ‘killer acquisitions’,Footnote 85 that is, transactions where large players acquire, at a very early stage, firms that could become a competitive threat at some point in the future. These operations occur before the target exercises ‘a significant constraining influence’ and before there is ‘significant likelihood that it would grow into an effective competitive force’. Typically, they would not warrant intervention under the Guidelines, which set a higher bar for potential competition to be considered in the assessment.Footnote 86
The emerging doctrine that best captures the sign of the times is the ‘ecosystem theory of harm’. This expansion of the substantive scope of the regime featured in the Commission decision in Booking/eTraveli.Footnote 87 The distinctive feature of this new theory of harm, and the reason it departs from existing ones, is that it applies the principles and logic of the Guidelines to instances that do not involve the amalgamation of actual or potential competitors.Footnote 88 Even though the target in Booking/eTraveli did not operate in the same relevant market as the acquirer, the Commission argued that the transaction could strengthen the latter’s dominant position through the same mechanisms horizontal transactions lead to a SIEC.Footnote 89 The authority argued, moreover, that non-horizontal mergers can be problematic in instances other than the ones identified in the Guidelines on non-horizontal mergers.Footnote 90
Following the Court’s judgement in CK Telecoms, it is apparent that the Commission does not enjoy discretion in relation to this ‘ecosystem theory of harm’ (and, indeed, any new doctrine testing the boundaries of the regime beyond existing soft law instruments). It will be for the EU courts to decide, first, whether intervention based on this doctrine is sufficiently robust from an economic standpoint; second, whether it remains within the boundaries of what is permitted by Regulation 139/2004 (just like the Court did in Kali & Salz, on the issue of whether collective dominance fell within the scope of Regulation 4064/89); and, third, to define the conditions under which an ‘ecosystem theory of harm’ can lead to a SIEC (in the same way the GC did when it set out, in Airtours, the criteria against which the creation or the strengthening of a collective dominant position was to be evaluated). The same conclusions would apply if the Commission sought to expand the concept of potential competition to capture ‘killer acquisitions’ occurring at a stage where the target is not a ‘potential competitor’ within the meaning of the (current) Guidelines.
Limited judicial review of complex assessments
The Court also confirmed that the Commission enjoys a margin of discretion as far as complex assessments are concerned. Where such assessments are involved, judicial review will be limited, in the sense that it would be confined to manifest errors of assessment. Accordingly, the EU courts’ scrutiny will be confined to three questions, namely ‘whether the evidence relied on is factually accurate, reliable and consistent’, ‘whether that evidence contains all the information which must be taken into account in order to assess a complex situation’ and, finally, ‘whether it is capable of substantiating the conclusions drawn from it’.Footnote 91 This passage in the appeal judgement is worthy of discussion not because of the position it expresses (it is, after all, a restatement of the Tetra Laval doctrine defining the scope and intensity of judicial review under the merger control regime),Footnote 92 but because of the view expressed by the GC in CK Telecoms. The first-instance judgement had made no reference to control for manifest errors when going over the principles governing the intensity of judicial review in EU merger control.Footnote 93
The remaining question, on which the appeal judgement sheds some light, relates to what amounts to a ‘complex assessment’ within the meaning of the case law. This category is best understood as encompassing two issues: in the first place, the economic tools on which the Commission relies; in the second, the conclusions it draws from them. The economic tools within the meaning of the category include the methodologies used to define the relevant market (such as the SSNIP test)Footnote 94 and to forecast the likely increase in prices in the post-merger scenario (of which the UPP and GUPPI tests are two examples).Footnote 95 In principle, the Commission enjoys discretion to decide the tools on which to rely. For instance, it cannot be compelled to administer the SSNIP test if there are other ways to define the relevant market.Footnote 96 The Commission also enjoys discretion when evaluating the findings that result from their use (for instance, the amount by which prices are expected to go up in the post-merger scenario and the boundaries of the relevant product market).Footnote 97
Against this background, the role of the EU courts in relation to complex assessments can be summarised as follows. In accordance with the Tetra Laval framework described above, the Court and the GC can ascertain, first, whether the economic tools used by the Commission are ‘robust’ enough. It could be the case, for instance, that the academic consensus sees the tools as unreliable (alternatively, they may remain untested, and their reliability is therefore yet to be established). The control for manifest errors also comprises, second, evaluating whether the evidence included by the Commission as part of its assessment is ‘complete’ and ‘accurate’. It seems uncontroversial to state that the outcome of complex assessments can only be trusted where all the necessary and correct inputs have been incorporated into the analysis.
Third, the EU courts may test whether the tools (and the outcomes that result from the use of such tools) are capable of substantiating the conclusions drawn from them. For instance, there should be little doubt that judicial scrutiny extends to the question of whether a particular econometric technique can, alone, substantiate the conclusion that the new entity would enjoy a dominant position in the post-merger scenario (or, more generally, that it would allow it to profitably increase its prices). Fourth (and in a similar vein), the GC and the Court may verify whether the evidence drawn from the use of such tools is internally consistent (and, likewise, whether the conclusions drawn by the Commission are based on the whole body of evidence or whether, instead, it is contradicted by some aspects thereof). These ideas are summarised in Figure 5.

Figure 5. Full and limited review in EU merger control after the appeal judgement in CK Telecoms.
The role of the EU courts in relation to complex economic assessments is usefully illustrated in light of the GC’s analysis in CK Telecoms. The Commission had relied, as part of its assessment, on UPP analysis. This tool showed that the transaction would incentivise the parties to significantly increase prices.Footnote 98 In line with the Tetra Laval case law (confirmed by the Court on appeal), the GC evaluated the robustness of this economic tool. It noted, in this sense, that UPP analysis is best used as a ‘first “screen”’ to determine whether a transaction warrants an in-depth investigation.Footnote 99 It was therefore not found to be robust enough, in and of itself, to substantiate the conclusion that a particular concentration would lead to a SIEC. The GC noted, more precisely, that the projections drawn from UPP analysis ‘must not [. . .] be regarded as credible forecasts of price increases or simulations of mergers’.Footnote 100 This aspect of the first-instance judgement was not challenged on appeal and, as already mentioned, is consistent with the Tetra Laval formula.
B. Towards de facto deference on issues of law?
Figure 5 is an attempt to capture the role and intensity of judicial review in EU merger control following the appeal judgement in CK Telecoms. As already explained, it is for the EU courts to interpret both the SIEC test and the factors into which it is broken down. Accordingly, it is not enough for the Commission to argue that its interpretation of the legal provisions is defensible (or not manifestly incorrect). It is equally irrelevant that the exercise involves complex economic assessments. The question, at least in principle, is whether the way the authority construes and applies the various legal concepts is the correct one. In the same vein, the EU courts are not bound by the Commission’s soft law instruments; and need not show deference with respect to emerging theories featuring in individual decisions or new iterations of the Guidelines.
In practice, however, the judicial review of issues of law may become less strict, and something akin to a reasonableness standardFootnote 101 may become the norm de facto – if not de iure – in the wake of CK Telecoms. It is submitted, in this sense, that, once the EU courts are confronted with the reality of what the scrutiny of merger decisions entails, the doctrine that applies to complex assessments may creep into the review of issues of law. Moving forward, judicial review may revolve, in effect, around whether the interpretation of the relevant legal concepts is, first, reasonable from a substantive perspective; second, whether it is based on all the relevant factors; and third, whether due process considerations have been observed when evaluating the evidence and when considering the arguments raised by the parties.Footnote 102
The interpretative choices made by the Court help understand why administrative action may in practice be subject to a reasonableness standard (as opposed to full review) and become process-oriented (as opposed to substance-oriented).Footnote 103 To begin with, the factors against which the compatibility of concentrations is assessed are allowed to vary from one case to another. The basis for the substantive assessment can therefore fluctuate depending on the nature of the transaction and the underlying context. Second, the Court did not identify a general, overarching test – such as the one defined by the GC – against which the significance of the impediment can be assessed. Similarly, the judgement provides no guidance in relation to how many factors need to be present for a SIEC to be established to the requisite legal standard (or whether a minimum set of such factors must be established for a finding of non-coordinated effects to be deemed substantiated). Finally, the Court did not provide guidance on how to deal with instances where the analysis of the various factors leads to contradictory conclusions (with some factors suggesting a SIEC and others pointing to the opposite outcome).
The approach followed by the Court to define the substantive scope of each of the individual factors also favours the emergence of a reasonableness standard. Unlike the GC, the ECJ did not set a hard substantive boundary marking the point at which the closeness of competition between the parties is deemed significant enough for it to be considered in the assessment. In a similar vein, a maverick need not be, according to the appeal judgement, a ‘particularly important’ competitive force (to the point that the judgement does not rule out that there could be, in a given oligopolistic market, more than one such maverick). The Court suggests that the relevance of these factors must be assessed, along a continuum, in light of the features of the relevant market. Whether or not the parties are close competitors, for instance, can only be assessed on a case-by-case basis, that is, by ascertaining whether, in relative terms, the parties’ competitive relationship is close, even if it not particularly so.
The reason why these interpretative choices might inevitably alter the nature and intensity of judicial review is apparent. Where there is no overarching substantive test defining the boundaries between significant and insignificant impediments, and where the relevance of each of the factors depends on the specificities of the relevant market, there is no distinct, autonomous benchmark against which the legal characterisation of facts can be controlled by a judge. As a consequence, a court would only be in a position to engage in the full review of issues of law by engaging in complex assessments itself; that is, by substituting its own assessment for that of the authority. For instance, the question of whether the parties are close competitors would require ascertaining whether the Commission was correct when finding that the degree of substitutability of the products offered by the parties is higher than that of rivals. These are evaluations from which judges typically refrain.
If, by design, the review of issues of law demands the court to substitute its own assessment for that of the authority, it seems almost inevitable that the margin of discretion that applies to complex assessments will find its way into both the interpretation of legal concepts and the legal characterisation of facts. There are compelling reasons why review judges are likely to exercise restraint when confronted with this situation. If they were to substitute their own assessment for that of the authority, judges would become, in effect, second or third-tier administrative authorities evaluating the compatibility of concentrations with the internal market. This task is not one for which they are particularly well equipped. More importantly, it is not the task that has been allocated to them under the TFEU. The role of the EU courts is confined to reviewing the legality of decisions adopted by the Commission.
Expanding the margin of discretion doctrine to issues of law is not any less problematic from the perspective of the allocation of powers between the Commission and the EU courts. If the administrative authority benefits from de facto deference in relation to the interpretation and application of legal concepts, it would be enjoying jurisdiction on matters which are in principle the exclusive province of the Court (such as, inter alia, whether a new theory is robust enough to justify a finding of a SIEC). This point was, in fact, emphasised by Advocate General Kokott in her Opinion.Footnote 104 The conclusion that follows is that the interpretative choices made in CK Telecoms could lead, in effect, to two outcomes that are equally unsatisfactory and difficult to reconcile with the roles that the TFEU assigned to, respectively, the EU courts and the Commission. Placed between a rock and a hard place, process-oriented review, confined to manifest errors, is more likely to prevail.
5. Deference on issues of law: assessment and implications
A. Deference as an adjustment to a changing landscape
The preceding section concludes that the interpretative choices made by the Court in CK Telecoms have the potential to change the nature and intensity of judicial review in EU merger control. There would be compelling constitutional reasons to object to such a transformation. They have been outlined above and need not be rehearsed here. What is worth emphasising, on the other hand, is that, according to a growing number of commentators, the current economic and technological landscape provides arguments in support of leaving the Commission with a margin of discretion when evaluating the legality of concentrations. One can think of two overarching claims in support of deference on issues of law. The first has to do with the perception that merger control requires nimble decision-making. The second, with the importance of leaving authorities scope for experimentation. These two arguments are examined in turn.
Deference and nimble decision-making
It has been frequently stated in the course of the past decade that merger control has become too permissive, if not plain ineffective.Footnote 105 These claims must be understood against the background of a growing body of economic research discussing whether industries have become increasingly concentrated in the course of the past decades.Footnote 106 Proponents of vigorous action take the view that the merger control regime must be overhauled so that it addresses two perceived flaws. One of them is competition authorities’ allegedly complacent attitude. According to this view, agencies may have become overly concerned with overenforcement, as opposed to underenforcement; and, similarly, have favoured negotiated outcomes (as opposed to outright declarations of incompatibility, which remain rare).Footnote 107 A second claim, which might explain in part the first, is, in essence, a criticism of the impact of economic analysis on competition authorities’ ability to establish harm to the requisite legal standard. The economic evidence produced by the parties in the context of the administrative procedure would arguably place an unmanageable load on agencies.Footnote 108
A number of proposals have been advanced to reinvigorate merger control regimes and allow for nimble decision-making. Some of the ideas involve reversing the burden of proof, at least in relation to transactions with a horizontal dimension. For instance, Lancieri and Valletti plead in favour of presuming the incompatibility of concentrations exceeding certain thresholds.Footnote 109 Such an approach would dispense with the need to define the relevant market and to establish the likely impact of the operation. Instead, it would be for the parties to provide the requisite evidence showing why the transaction would be on balance pro-competitive. Other approaches are aimed at tweaking the applicable threshold of effects so that agencies enjoy greater leeway in practice. A prominent example in this sense is provided by the so-called Furman Report.Footnote 110 The authors proposed a ‘balance of harms’ standard, which would allow, in essence, authorities to take action against a merger when it is plausible that it would be on the whole anticompetitive.Footnote 111
Deference on issues of law is an effective alternative to these proposed adjustments to the system. Process-oriented review would lead to analogous outcomes, albeit via a different route. The shift from substance to process would give authorities, in effect, the sort of leeway that the abovementioned approaches intend to provide. Limited review, confined to manifest errors of assessment is, in essence, the mirror image of the ‘balance of harms’ approach advocated in the Furman Report. Similarly, deference on issues of law, without going as far as to lead to a reversal of the burden of proof, may work in a fundamentally identical way. This is so, in particular, where the authority exploits the increased margin of discretion to develop proxies and bright lines dispensing it with the need to engage in the sort of in-depth economic analysis that, it is argued, delays decision-making.
A deferential standard of scrutiny on issues of law would not just be the functional equivalent to other proposed approaches. It would have the added advantage that it could develop organically through the interaction between the administrative authorities and the review courts. The increased margin of discretion would not require legislative amendments, or even the adoption of a new set of Guidelines. It would simply be manifested in its decision-making practice. A more deferential approach to the review of administrative action need not even be declared explicitly, or even in a reiterated manner. It can be inferred and signalled to the authority from the approach displayed in individual cases. Commentators have noted, for instance, that the intensity of the scrutiny by the GC in thyssenkrupp contrasts with that displayed in the CK Telecoms.Footnote 112 In its appeal in the former the firm argued, unsuccessfully, that the first-instance court had proved overly deferential to the Commission.Footnote 113
Deference as a platform for experimentation
A second, related reason why deference may be warranted has to do with the fact that full review of issues of law discourages risk-taking by authorities. In a changing economic and technological landscape, the argument goes, agencies should be entitled to reshape and redefine legal concepts to tackle emerging challenges more effectively. For instance – and coming back to one of the examples mentioned above – one could argue that an authority should be given the necessary deference to reinterpret the concept of potential competition so as to capture sources of competitive pressure that are not necessarily likely to materialise in the foreseeable future (and therefore would not meet the conditions set out in the current iteration of the Guidelines). Such a revised interpretation would prevent harm resulting from, among others, ‘killer acquisitions’. According to this view, deference would mean treating what is in principle an issue of law (the scope and meaning of the notion of potential competition) as a policy matter, thereby allowing the authority to preserve the effectiveness of merger control.
Increased deference would encourage experimentation and risk-taking by the authority in a different way. Giving a margin of discretion on issues of law would change how the Commission engages with non-legal disciplines. With the advent of the ‘more economics-based approach’, expertise was conceived as a constraint on administrative action, in the sense that it sought to keep the latter within the mainstream body of knowledge and within the range of approaches and methodologies widely accepted by subject-matter specialists. Such an understanding ensured, for instance, that the notion of collective dominance would be defined by reference to the economic concept of tacit collusion, as opposed to a sui generis interpretation developed by the Commission.Footnote 114 It also ensured, just to give another example, that intervention against conglomerate transactions would remain confined to the instances identified as potentially problematic in the relevant literature.Footnote 115
Once deference is extended to issues of law, the relationship between legal and non-legal expertise is fundamentally altered, and this in two ways. In the first place, the latter would no longer act as a constraint on administrative action. Its role would be the opposite, in the sense that it would provide the very intellectual basis for the expansion of the boundaries of intervention. Under this approach, second, expertise need not reflect or capture consensus views. It could also be unorthodox or relatively tentative. For instance, intervention could be grounded on an emerging theory that has not necessarily gained widespread acceptance in the relevant extra-legal profession. Similarly, the range of expertise on which administrative action relies could be expanded. It has been noted, in this sense, that the so-called ‘ecosystem theory of harm’, on which cases like Booking/eTraveli are based, has been developed by management scholars, not by economists.Footnote 116
B. Implications of deference
Any analysis of deference on issues of law, and how it could allow the system to adjust to the demands of a changing economic and technological landscape, would be incomplete without a discussion of its implications for EU merger control at large. The fact that a margin of discretion relating to the interpretation of the SIEC test might improve the effectiveness of enforcement does not imply that the system would necessarily fare better if process-oriented review and a standard of reasonableness became the norm. An inescapable consequence of the shift would be its impact on legal certainty and predictability. A second potential consequence relates to the quality of decision-making. It is unclear whether, as a general rule, greater leeway would improve the Commission’s output and, similarly, allow for the minimisation of enforcement errors.
The Court judgement in CK Telecoms placed particular emphasis on effective enforcement by the Commission. As explained above, it held that the GC’s interpretation of the SIEC test would leave unscrutinised transactions significantly strengthening the market power of one or several oligopolists. On the other hand, the ruling did not expressly address how the interpretation of the various factors enshrined in the Guidelines could impact legal certainty. Insofar as the relevant legal concepts (such as ‘closeness of competition’ or ‘important competitive force’) lack hard boundaries and can only be defined ex post (to the point that the authority enjoys de facto deference), it may not be obvious for the parties to anticipate the outcome of administrative action. Similarly (and this is a point raised by the GC), the authority may be in a position to find that the factors are present in virtually always and in every transaction. To the extent that this is the case, effective enforcement could be achieved at the expense of legal certainty.
While the latter principle did not feature in the Court’s analysis in CK Telecoms, it played a preeminent role in its subsequent judgement in Illumina.Footnote 117 The latter did not engage with substantive matters, but jurisdictional ones. This case is valuable, however, in that it provides an example of the tension that might arise between effective enforcement and legal certainty, and of how this tension might be resolved. More precisely, Illumina concerned the issue of whether the Commission could claim jurisdiction, pursuant to Article 22 of the Regulation 139/2004, in relation to transactions that do not have a Union dimension and also fail to meet the notification thresholds at the national level.Footnote 118 If effective enforcement were the only consideration, it would make sense to allow for the referral of such transactions. In fact, the response would meaningfully remedy the flaws of traditional notification thresholds, which may not always capture the potential significance of concentrations in certain industries, thereby jeopardising the regime’s ability to protect competition.Footnote 119
The Court ruled in Illumina that the Commission does not have the power to examine transactions referred by national authorities where the latter lack jurisdiction to consider their compatibility with the domestic regime.Footnote 120 Crucially for the purposes of this discussion, legal certainty was the central consideration in its analysis. The Court noted, in particular, that effective enforcement was not the only principle underpinning the referral mechanism in Regulation 139/2004 (and, more generally, the merger control regime). The system had also been designed to provide predictable outcomes.Footnote 121 In this sense, the point of the referral mechanism was to strengthen the logic of the system, which revolves around the so-called ‘one-stop shop’ principle and seeks to avoid potentially conflicting decisions resulting from multiple notifications of the same transaction.Footnote 122
The twin concern with legal certainty and effective enforcement in Regulation 139/2004 is not limited to jurisdictional matters. Recital 25, which has been discussed above and that was central to the outcome of CK Telecoms, makes an explicit reference to legal certainty. This general principle of EU law was, in fact, behind the shift to the SIEC test in Regulation 139/2004. Unlike Illumina, CK Telecoms did not clarify how legal certainty is to be balanced against effective enforcement. How to do so, as far as substantive issues are concerned, was ultimately left open in the judgement. It might arise in future cases. The fundamental question, if the issue is to be brought again before the Court, is whether a shift towards a reasonableness standard and process-oriented review would strike the right balance between legal certainty and effective enforcement. It is not clear that it would, and this insofar as it is likely to place too much emphasis on the latter.
It is equally unclear whether shifting the balance to favour effectiveness over legal certainty would necessarily lead to better enforcement. One cannot deny that deference on issues of law would give the Commission more leeway to test novel theories and to establish harm in a more straightforward way. It does not follow from this fact, however, that the quality of decision-making would necessarily improve. One can think of a number of reasons why more robust checks on administrative action might lead to better outcomes, both from a legal and a non-legal standpoint. This conclusion is, if anything, confirmed by the very history of EU merger control, which suggests that efforts to improve enforcement may be prompted by judicial review.Footnote 123
One of the reasons why deference and process-oriented review may not necessarily lead to better decision-making is that they could increase the likelihood of enforcement errors. It is undeniable, on the one hand, that a system that gives the administrative authority a margin of discretion on issues of law may well substantially reduce the risk of underenforcement. On the other hand, it is not necessarily the optimal regime to minimise the likelihood of errors across the board. A second reason has to do with reliance on novel, unorthodox or untested theories. There is no guarantee that a system that relies on such theories would lead to better outcomes. Tentative doctrines, by their very nature, will in some instances prove incorrect or misguided. For the same reasons, peer review by experts in the field may be seen as an indispensable robustness check on the non-legal aspects of administrative action, as well as a mechanism to ensure that resources are put to the best use.
6. Conclusions
The fact that issues of law are in theory subject to full review does not mean that they necessarily will be, in practice. One of the conclusions of this paper is that some interpretations of a legal provision may not allow for the effective and meaningful control of administrative action. This is so, in particular, where the definition of a legal concept is not obvious to disentangle from the complex assessments that are required to characterise the facts of the case. It is submitted that, at least in the area of merger control, full review of points of law may only be possible where provisions have an autonomous meaning that is independent of the specificities of the transaction under consideration. These insights informed the GC’s interpretation of the SIEC test in CK Telecoms. For instance, it held that, whether or not two parties are ‘close competitors’ is a legal question that should be defined ex ante, so its boundaries are not contingent on the outcome of any complex assessments.
Where the meaning of a legal concept can only be discerned ex post (that is, once the features of the relevant market and the dynamics of competition therein have been evaluated), there is a risk that, almost inevitably, judicial review is confined to control for manifest errors. If the interpretation of a legal concept necessitates complex assessments, full scrutiny of issues of law requires judges to substitute their own assessment for that of the authority. It requires them, in other words, to become, de facto, an upper-tier administrative authority. Placed between Scylla and Charybdis, one can expect review courts to favour judicial restraint. The appeal judgement in CK Telecoms did not engage with the consequences of interpreting legal concepts in a way that makes it necessary to perform complex assessments. The issue therefore remains therefore open at the time of writing.
Confining the scrutiny of issues of law to manifest errors of assessment would entail a major transformation of the relationship between the Commission and the EU courts. Marginal control of substantive legal questions would give way to a form of process-oriented review. Since the EU courts cannot substitute their own assessment for that of the Commission and since they lack the tools to perform complex economic assessments, the evaluation of the interpretation of legal concepts would be confined to ascertaining whether it is a reasonable one in light of the features and dynamics of the relevant market. There would be compelling constitutional reasons to object to the transformation of the nature and intensity of judicial review in such a way. It would amount, in effect, to delegating the definition of legal concepts to the administrative authorities.
In the current economic and technological landscape, however, there are growing calls for rethinking merger control regimes so that authorities have the means and the incentives to take greater risks. Deference on issues of law and process-based review would give the Commission the policy space to test unconstrained emerging theories (including those revolving around ecosystems) and to tackle new harms (such as those resulting from the so-called ‘killer acquisitions’, which might require an expansive redefinition of the concept of potential competition). In addition, a margin of discretion in relation to the interpretation of legal concepts may ensure that enforcement remains effective, in the sense that it allows the Commission to attain its aims. The effectiveness of administrative action was, in fact, central to the Court’s assessment in CK Telecoms.
Even leaving constitutional arguments aside, it is not clear that a shift towards deference and process-based review would be beneficial for the merger control regime considered as the whole. One should bear in mind, first, that effective enforcement cannot be the only consideration informing the shaping of the system and the definition of its boundaries. Legal certainty is at least as relevant in this regard, as the Court judgement in Illumina emphasised. Against this background, it is not clear that deference on issues of law strikes the right balance between the two considerations. A second factor to take into account is that there is no certainty that giving the authority more leeway will necessarily increase the quality of decision-making. If anything, the very history of merger control provides a cautionary tale in this regard. Given the many issues that were left open in CK Telecoms, how judicial review in EU merger control evolves remains an open question.
Acknowledgements
I am grateful to Eduardo Baistrocchi, Gianni De Stefano, Andriani Kalintiri and Ioanna Kladi for their comments on a previous version of this article. I am also indebted to Joana Mendes for the inspiring conversations on the core argument and to the editors of European Law Open.
Competing interests
In accordance with the ASCOLA declaration of ethics, I am happy to clarify that I have nothing to disclose.