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CAN
country rules of competition to be
harmonized
with European Union assistance
Lima, March 3, 2003. The Andean
Community Secretariat and the
European Community today presented
the Competition Project that will
make it possible, over the next
three years, to improve and
harmonize Bolivian, Colombian,
Ecuadorian, Peruvian, and
Venezuelan legislation on
competition and support the
institutions responsible for its
control and application.
The Head of the European
Commission Delegation to Peru,
Ambassador Mendel Goldstein, and
the Andean Community (CAN)
Director General, Héctor
Maldonado, were responsible for
its presentation.
Representatives of the project
beneficiaries were present at the
ceremony: the CAN General
Secretariat, the Andean Court of
Justice, and institutions
responsible for competition, such
as Peru’s Indecopi, Venezuela’s
Procompetencia, Colombia’s Office
of the Superintendent of Industry
and Trade, Bolivia’s National
Bureau of Domestic Trade, and
Ecuador’s Foreign Trade Policy
Bureau.
The aim of the project is to
improve the region’s legislative,
administrative and judicial
context for competition law,
support the Andean institutions
responsible for the application
and control of provisions on the
subject, and promote a culture of
competition.
A number of activities will be
carried out to attain these
objectives, with the participation
of European and Andean experts:
subregional and national seminars;
juridical consultancies and
sectorial studies; the training of
officials and magistrates
responsible for the application
and control of competition
regulations; and in-service
training, among other things.
Financing for the three-year
project will come from the
European Commission, which will
provide two million euros, and the
beneficiaries, which will allocate
a total of 1.5 million euros for
that purpose.
Héctor Maldonado underscored the
importance of having rules of
competition to ensure the free
play of market forces and boost
economic efficiency and, above all,
reinforce the economic integration
of the CAN countries. “For that
reason, we believe that the
project will help us to move ahead
firmly toward our target of
establishing the Andean Common
Market in 2005," he stressed.
Ambassador Mendel Goldstein, for
his part, asserted that "the
Competition project is among the
European Union’s Cooperation
priorities, which include support
for the Andean Community’s
institutional efforts in this area.”
The presentation was made during
the First Seminar on Subregional
Reflection on the state of
competition, which will end on
Wednesday, March 5, and be
followed, on March 6, by the First
Meeting of the Project Follow-up
Committee.
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