Book contents
- Confucian Culture and Competition Law in East Asia
- Confucian Culture and Competition Law in East Asia
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Confucian Culture and Its Influence in East Asia
- 3 Confucian Business Culture and Its Implications for Competition Law
- 4 Confucian Corporate Culture and Competition Compliance
- 5 Confucian Political-Bureaucratic Culture and Its Links with the Administrative Enforcement of Competition Law
- 6 Confucian ‘Litigation Culture’ and the Under-development of Private Antitrust Enforcement
- 7 Confucian Legal Culture and the Regional Response to the Criminalization of Cartel Conduct
- 8 Conclusion
- Selected Bibliography
- Index
5 - Confucian Political-Bureaucratic Culture and Its Links with the Administrative Enforcement of Competition Law
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 September 2022
- Confucian Culture and Competition Law in East Asia
- Confucian Culture and Competition Law in East Asia
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Confucian Culture and Its Influence in East Asia
- 3 Confucian Business Culture and Its Implications for Competition Law
- 4 Confucian Corporate Culture and Competition Compliance
- 5 Confucian Political-Bureaucratic Culture and Its Links with the Administrative Enforcement of Competition Law
- 6 Confucian ‘Litigation Culture’ and the Under-development of Private Antitrust Enforcement
- 7 Confucian Legal Culture and the Regional Response to the Criminalization of Cartel Conduct
- 8 Conclusion
- Selected Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Chapter 5 discusses the bureaucratic characteristics of Confucianism, and the shaping of administrative competition enforcement. It explores the continuity between ancient bureaucratic practices and modern administrative structures. While competition law is making important strides in the countries concerned, old traditions have impeded a more complete trust in open markets. The chapter recounts the influence of the Confucian heritage and discusses the bureaucratic elements that derive from that tradition, all of which sheds light on the features of the administrative model in East Asia. Since far-reaching reforms such as the abandonment of the administrative model would entail profound upheaval and are unlikely, the chapter underlines the feasibility of less radical improvements. In this regard, more effective enforcement appears to require a modernization of bureaucratic systems. Among other things, the chapter advocates reforms that would: enhance the independence of competition authorities from government; increase accountability through checks and balances; and promote predictability and certainty through transparency in rules, policies and decision-making.
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- Confucian Culture and Competition Law in East Asia , pp. 145 - 198Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022