
By: Jim O’Connell & Alexander Wang (Covington Competition)
When its Anti-Monopoly Law (“AML”) went into effect in August 2008, China immediately became a significant antitrust enforcer on the world stage. On June 24, 2022, the National People’s Congress, China’s top legislature, passed the Amendment to the Anti-Monopoly Law of the PRC (the “Amendment”), the first significant changes to the AML in nearly fourteen years. The Amendment, which was signed into law by President Xi Jinping and published on June 24, will become effective on August 1. It marks a major milestone in antitrust enforcement in China.
The more significant aspects of the Amendment include:
- significantly enhanced penalties for AML violations, including the introduction of fines for individuals;
- the introduction of a discretionary “stop-the-clock” mechanism for merger reviews;
- the codification of a burden-shifting framework created by China’s courts that gives companies the opportunity to defend resale price maintenance agreements; and
- new safe harbor and burden of proof provisions for matters involving vertical agreements.
Consistent with trends in other jurisdictions around the world, the Amendment also features a special focus on key economic sectors such as the digital economy…
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