Publicaciones
- Necessary inventionsEconomic policies to increas low-carbon innovationBoletín | 15.07.2010.
- Economic Analysis of the RSPTWith a postscript on the negotiated outcomeArtículo | 05.07.2010.
- Not patently obviousHolders of patents and the Australian Trade Practices ActBoletín | 30.06.2010.
- Shelf lifeUsing promotions effectivelyBoletín | 10.06.2010.
- RPI-X@20: Output measures in the future regulatory frameworkA report prepared for OfgemArtículo | 31.05.2010.
- RPI-X@20: The future role of benchmarking in regulatory reviewsA final report prepared for OfgemArtículo | 31.05.2010.
- Public competitionThe choices facing the UK government after the electionBoletín | 29.04.2010.
- What if, but for?Enron versus EWSBoletín | 13.04.2010.
- What's the damage?Measuring harm from exclusionary practicesBoletín | 13.04.2010.
- Liquid marketsProspects for introducing water tradingBoletín | 21.01.2010.
Back to the future
Findings of the Competition Commission's groceries inquiryIn May 2006, the UK Office of Fair Trading (OFT) referred the groceries sector to the Competition Commission, highlighting concerns that included pricing, the effect of buyer power on the viability of wholesalers, and the linked issues of supermarkets’ land holdings and the planning system. In April 2008, the Competition Commission rejected most of the OFT’s concerns. Instead, it largely re-addressed issues it had focused on in its 2000 supermarkets inquiry, where its recommended remedies had either not been imposed, or had not been as effective as it had hoped.
Frontier bulletin-Back to the future.pdf |


Frontier bulletin-Back to the future.pdf