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EU antitrust regulators to investigate ecommerce
| Reuters
1. EU antitrust regulators to investigate ecommerce | Reuters
BERLIN European Union regulators plan to investigate ecommerce to help remove barriers to cross-
border trade in the 28-nation bloc, the EU's antitrust chief said, a move that may lead to action
against companies which deliberately block online sales.
European Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager said she decided to launch the year-long
inquiry because such hurdles were hampering the growth of online sales.
According to the European Commission, while one in two EU consumers shopped online last year,
just 15 percent bought a product online in another EU country because of restrictions
http://astore.amazon.com/ such as language, different laws and anti-competitive behavior,
"It is high time to remove remaining
barriers to ecommerce, which is a vital part
of a true Digital Single Market in Europe,"
Vestager told reporters at a conference
organized by the German competition
authority on Thursday.
"We hope to get the preliminary results in
mid-2016. It is a long wait but it reflects the
scope of the inquiry," Vestager said. The
EU competition authority plans to send
questionnaires to all EU countries and a
number of companies.
Vestager's announcement came a day after the Commission said it would unveil proposals in May to
remove online sales barriers to promote growth in the digital economy..
It highlighted high delivery costs and differences in prices charged
http://www.amazon.com/s?ie=UTF8&page=1&rh=i%3Aaps%2Ck%3Aproduct by online retailers for
the same goods to consumers in different countries.
2. Vestager's inquiry aims to identify anti-competitive barriers and find ways to tackle them.
Vestager, whose staff this month raided a number of companies which sell consumer electrical and
electronic products online on suspicion of illegal behavior, said she was also investigating possible
"geo-blocking" of online video games sales.
The latest action followed raids in December 2013 on Dutch company Philips, South Korean peer
Samsung and German retail chain Media Saturn.
Vestager, who is Danish, said the inquiry was not targeted at U.S. companies which are major
players in ecommerce.
"It is not a question of nationality, it is a question of behavior," she said.
The Commission can open cases against companies if the inquiry finds evidence of wrongdoing.
Previous inquiries targeted the pharmaceutical and banking sectors, which led to cases and fines
against several firms.
(Editing by Keith Weir)
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/03/26/us-eu-vestager-ecommerce-idUSKBN0MM0SQ20150326