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"Annual Report 2002"



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1 Company profile

The Danish Competition Authority is an independent body under the Danish Ministry of Economic and Business Affairs. The Authority is responsible for matters related to competition, energy regulation, public procurement and state aid. The Authority is the secretariat of the Danish Competition Council and the Danish Energy Regulatory Authority. The Danish Competition Authority performs a number of tasks in co-operation with the competition authority of the European Commission, the Directorate-General for Competition.

1.1 Strategy

The Danish Competition Authority strongly supports the notion that competition encourages prosperity and innovation.

The Authority strives to create an effective market through competition in both the public and private sectors. The mission of the Competition Authority is to contribute to an effective market economy where competition ensures a wide range of goods and services at reasonable prices and with competition for public procurements.

The Authority aims at being one of the most effective, competent and service-minded competition authorities in the OECD countries.

The government has set two concrete goals to intensify competition in Denmark:­ During a decade the number of industries in Denmark with competition problems is to be halved. ­ The average price level in Denmark is to be converged to the average price levels of the countries that Denmark is traditionally compared with.

The Danish Competition Act is – like in many other countries and in the EU – based on the principle of prohibition. The act is “full-fledged”, i.e. based on the principle of prohibition, and includes merger control. The Authority publishes an annual Competition Report (Konkurrenceredegørelse), which measures competition in Denmark, analyses the financial and legal situation, and describes major decisions of the year.

1.2 Organisation

The Authority comprises five competition units, a unit dealing with public procurement, two units dealing with energy regulation, the secretariat of legal and inter national affairs, an administration secretariat and a management secretariat.

The Authority has developed a project and network organisation that stimulates teamwork, cross-sectional co-operation and internal mobility. The results of this organisation have increased productivity, development capacity and employee satisfaction.

The Authority currently employs 130 persons. 75 employees work with the Competition Act, 30 work with energy regulation, 10 work with procurement and state aid, and 15 are administrative employees. The number of academic employees is 98.

Management group

Director:

Deputy directors:
 

Heads of competition units:
Food and manufacturing:
Construction and media:
Services:
Infrastructure:

Energy, finance and state aid:

Energy regulation unit:
Public procurement:
Secretariat of legal and international affairs:
Administration secretariat:

Management secretariat:

Finn Lauritzen

Niels Erik Monrad
Kim Sparlund

Hans Kierkegaard
Sven Westh
Finn Porsborg
Niels Rytter
 

Jacob Schaumburg-Müller

Jan Hansen
Merete Rasmussen
Kirsten Levinsen

Erik B. Christiansen
Pia Ziegler

1.3 The Competition Council

The Danish Competition Council is composed of a chairman and 18 members. The Council represents versatile knowledge of public and private enterprise, including legal, economic, financial and consumer-related issues.

The chairman and eight of the Council members must be independent of commercial and consumer interests. The Minister of Economic and Business Affairs appoints seven members on the recommendation of trade organisations, one member on the recommendation of consumer organisations and two members who are experts in public enterprise on the recommendation of the organisations of the local authorities.

The Competition Council decides on major cases and test cases on the basis of submissions made by the Competition Authority. The Council meets once a month. The Authority is responsible for the day-to-day management on behalf of the Council. The decisions and case administration of the Council and the Authority are not influenced by the Ministry or Minister, but are subject to appeal before the Competition Appeal Tribunal and subsequently the ordinary courts.



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Version 1.0 April 2003 • © Danish Competition Authority. Published by the Danish Competition Authority, http://www.ks.dk/
Publication produced according to the standard for electronic publication set by the Government