The evolution of the Hungarian competition regime: 2 decades of dynamic change and continuity Mobilis in mobili

Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksChapterpeer-review

Standard

The evolution of the Hungarian competition regime: 2 decades of dynamic change and continuity Mobilis in mobili. / Kovacs, Csaba; Reindl, Andreas.
Building New Competition Law Regimes: Selected essays. ed. / David Lewis. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2013. p. 26-80.

Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksChapterpeer-review

Harvard

Kovacs, C & Reindl, A 2013, The evolution of the Hungarian competition regime: 2 decades of dynamic change and continuity Mobilis in mobili. in D Lewis (ed.), Building New Competition Law Regimes: Selected essays. Edward Elgar Publishing, Cheltenham, pp. 26-80. https://doi.org/10.4337/9781781953730.00008

APA

Kovacs, C., & Reindl, A. (2013). The evolution of the Hungarian competition regime: 2 decades of dynamic change and continuity Mobilis in mobili. In D. Lewis (Ed.), Building New Competition Law Regimes: Selected essays (pp. 26-80). Edward Elgar Publishing. https://doi.org/10.4337/9781781953730.00008

Vancouver

Kovacs C, Reindl A. The evolution of the Hungarian competition regime: 2 decades of dynamic change and continuity Mobilis in mobili. In Lewis D, editor, Building New Competition Law Regimes: Selected essays. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing. 2013. p. 26-80 doi: 10.4337/9781781953730.00008

Bibtex

@inbook{010ca7b03c254f49803293d93f492f3f,
title = "The evolution of the Hungarian competition regime: 2 decades of dynamic change and continuity Mobilis in mobili",
abstract = "In the 2 decades since the fall of the communist regime in 1989–1990, Hungary has developed what many consider one of the more successful {\textquoteleft}new{\textquoteright} competition regimes. Our essay examines factors that contributed to this development, the interdependence between the competition regime and Hungary{\textquoteright}s economic development, long considered a success story among emerging market economies, and developments that might threaten the success achieved to date. Our discussion begins with a chronological overview of events that we organise into three periods: the transition years after the fall of the communist regime (approximately 1990–1998); the period during which EU accession emerged as a dominant force (approximately 1999–2004); and the {\textquoteleft}contemporary{\textquoteright} period following EU accession (approximately 2005–2010). Even though each period can be characterised by a particular set of domestic and international events, there are no sharp dividing lines between them: developments overlapped and certain more recent events could not have happened without earlier efforts. The second section takes a more analytical approach and looks at features that have consistently played a prominent role in the Hungarian competition regime, including the enabling environment, the GVH as an institution, and its advocacy and enforcement activities. In this section we also develop our main points about factors that most critically contributed to success: the GVH{\textquoteright}s ability to carefully identify the right opportunities – created by both the international and domestic environments – to promote competition policy and enforcement; the openness to learn from good practices developed and applied in other jurisdictions; and continuity in the Hungarian competition regime, ",
keywords = "Law, Politics",
author = "Csaba Kovacs and Andreas Reindl",
year = "2013",
month = jan,
day = "1",
doi = "10.4337/9781781953730.00008",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781781953723",
pages = "26--80",
editor = "David Lewis",
booktitle = "Building New Competition Law Regimes",
publisher = "Edward Elgar Publishing",
address = "United Kingdom",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - The evolution of the Hungarian competition regime

T2 - 2 decades of dynamic change and continuity Mobilis in mobili

AU - Kovacs, Csaba

AU - Reindl, Andreas

PY - 2013/1/1

Y1 - 2013/1/1

N2 - In the 2 decades since the fall of the communist regime in 1989–1990, Hungary has developed what many consider one of the more successful ‘new’ competition regimes. Our essay examines factors that contributed to this development, the interdependence between the competition regime and Hungary’s economic development, long considered a success story among emerging market economies, and developments that might threaten the success achieved to date. Our discussion begins with a chronological overview of events that we organise into three periods: the transition years after the fall of the communist regime (approximately 1990–1998); the period during which EU accession emerged as a dominant force (approximately 1999–2004); and the ‘contemporary’ period following EU accession (approximately 2005–2010). Even though each period can be characterised by a particular set of domestic and international events, there are no sharp dividing lines between them: developments overlapped and certain more recent events could not have happened without earlier efforts. The second section takes a more analytical approach and looks at features that have consistently played a prominent role in the Hungarian competition regime, including the enabling environment, the GVH as an institution, and its advocacy and enforcement activities. In this section we also develop our main points about factors that most critically contributed to success: the GVH’s ability to carefully identify the right opportunities – created by both the international and domestic environments – to promote competition policy and enforcement; the openness to learn from good practices developed and applied in other jurisdictions; and continuity in the Hungarian competition regime,

AB - In the 2 decades since the fall of the communist regime in 1989–1990, Hungary has developed what many consider one of the more successful ‘new’ competition regimes. Our essay examines factors that contributed to this development, the interdependence between the competition regime and Hungary’s economic development, long considered a success story among emerging market economies, and developments that might threaten the success achieved to date. Our discussion begins with a chronological overview of events that we organise into three periods: the transition years after the fall of the communist regime (approximately 1990–1998); the period during which EU accession emerged as a dominant force (approximately 1999–2004); and the ‘contemporary’ period following EU accession (approximately 2005–2010). Even though each period can be characterised by a particular set of domestic and international events, there are no sharp dividing lines between them: developments overlapped and certain more recent events could not have happened without earlier efforts. The second section takes a more analytical approach and looks at features that have consistently played a prominent role in the Hungarian competition regime, including the enabling environment, the GVH as an institution, and its advocacy and enforcement activities. In this section we also develop our main points about factors that most critically contributed to success: the GVH’s ability to carefully identify the right opportunities – created by both the international and domestic environments – to promote competition policy and enforcement; the openness to learn from good practices developed and applied in other jurisdictions; and continuity in the Hungarian competition regime,

KW - Law

KW - Politics

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85040112069&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.4337/9781781953730.00008

DO - 10.4337/9781781953730.00008

M3 - Chapter

SN - 9781781953723

SP - 26

EP - 80

BT - Building New Competition Law Regimes

A2 - Lewis, David

PB - Edward Elgar Publishing

CY - Cheltenham

ER -

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