Cover von: Einseitige Beschränkungen des Parallelhandels durch marktbeherrschende Arzneimittelhersteller im Binnenmarkt
Wolfgang Wurmnest

Einseitige Beschränkungen des Parallelhandels durch marktbeherrschende Arzneimittelhersteller im Binnenmarkt

[Unilateral Restrictions of Parallel Trade by Dominant Pharmaceutical Companies - Protection of Innovation or Anti-competitive Market Foreclosure? Einseitige Beschränkungen des Parallelhandels durch marktbeherrschende Arzneimittelhersteller im Binnen]
Rubrik: Aufsätze
Jahrgang 73 (2009) / Heft 4, S. 962-984 (23)
Publiziert 09.07.2018
DOI 10.1628/003372509789566578
Veröffentlicht auf Englisch.
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  • 10.1628/003372509789566578
Beschreibung
Unilateral Restrictions of Parallel Trade by Dominant Pharmaceutical Companies - Protection of Innovation or Anti-competitive Market Foreclosure? The elimination of cross-border barriers to trade as means of encouraging competition in the single market lies at the heart of EC-competition policy. Limitations of parallel trade were therefore treated as restrictions of competition. With regard to the pharmaceutical sector the merit of such a competition policy has been called into question. It is said that the unique features of the market for pharmaceuticals, namely the existence of price regulation at the national level for prescription medicines, makes parallel trade socially undesirable as it does not foster real price competition and undermines investment in R&D to the detriment of the consumer. Hence, unilaterally imposed restrictions of parallel trade by dominant producers, such as supply quota systems, should not be regarded as a violation of Art. 82 EC. This article discusses the legal and economic arguments in favour of a policy shift in light of the recent case Lélos v. GlaxoSmithKline. In this case the European Court of Justice (ECJ) has held that a pharmaceutical company in a dominant position cannot be allowed to cease honouring the ordinary orders of an existing customer for the sole reason that the customer engages in parallel trade, but that Art. 82 EC does not prohibit a dominant undertaking from refusing to fill orders that are out of the ordinary in terms of quantity in order to protect its commercial interests. It is argued that the ECJ was right in denying pharmaceutical companies a general right to limit the flow of pharmaceutical products by unilateral measures as the pro-competitive effects of parallel trade are greater than often assumed.