FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                          AT
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 1995                           (202) 616-2771
                                               TDD (202) 514-1888

                                 
     DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION RELEASE 

              NEW INTERNATIONAL ANTITRUST GUIDELINES



     WASHINGTON, D.C. -- The Department of Justice and the Federal 
Trade Commission (FTC) today jointly issued new Antitrust Enforcement 
Guidelines for International Operations. 
     In recognition of the United States' role as the world's top 
exporter and importer, the Guidelines will provide the framework to 
help stop international anticompetitive practices that hurt U.S. 
businesses and customers.  The Guidelines will also help answer 
questions that U.S. and foreign businesses may have relating to the 
Agencies' international antitrust enforcement policy.
     The Guidelines were unveiled in Washington today in a speech by 
Deputy Assistant Attorney General Diane P. Wood before the American 
Bar Association Section of Antitrust Law. 
     The new international Guidelines are the final version of a 
draft proposal released by the Department of Justice and FTC for public 
comment on October 13, 1994.  Following a 60-day public comment period, 
a task force of Department and FTC attorneys and economists reviewed 
the comments and made changes where appropriate.  Anne K. Bingaman, 
Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Department's Antitrust 
Division, said "These Guidelines are tremendously important in the 
economic environment of the 1990's.  They send a simple message:we 
will vigorously enforce our antitrust laws in matters that fall within 
our jurisdiction, whether purely domestic or international in nature.  
     "The Guidelines also reaffirm our commitment to cooperation with 
foreign antitrust agencies -- cooperation that is mutually beneficial 
to our antitrust goals," Bingaman added.
     "It is particularly crucial that United States antitrust agencies 
speak with one voice about international antitrust policies," Bingaman 
concluded.  "That's why we are particularly pleased that the FTC has 
joined in these 1995 guidelines."  The previous international 
guidelines -- issued in 1977 and 1988, respectively -- were issued by 
the Department alone.
     Deputy Assistant Attorney General Wood, who chaired the group 
that drafted the guidelines, explained:  "Three fundamental principles 
underlie the 1995 International Guidelines. First, the Department and 
the FTC are committed to enforcing U.S. antitrust laws to the fullest
extent of the jurisdiction that Congress has conferred.  These new 
guidelines provide detailed statements of the way in which we interpret 
our statutory jurisdiction."
     "Second, we are committed to the principle of nondiscrimination 
in antitrust enforcement --we do not discriminate on the grounds of 
the nationality of the parties or on the location of relevant events.  
Nor do we employ our statutory authority to further non-antitrust goals."
     "Third, we are committed to the principles of international comity, 
both in our own enforcement actions and in our willingness to cooperate 
with our foreign counterparts.  Our successful law enforcement 
cooperation with Canadian and European Union antitrust authorities
during the past year is a harbinger of the benefits we can expect 
from fighting international cartels and other anticompetitive 
transnational behavior through more systematic cooperation between 
national antitrust agencies."
     Copies of Deputy Assistant Attorney General Wood's speech and
the 1995 International Guidelines are available to members of the
media in the Justice Department's Public Affairs Office.  Others
can obtain copies from the Legal Procedure Unit of the Antitrust
Division, Room 3235, Department of Justice, Washington, DC 20530 
(telephone: 202-514-2481).  The guidelines are also available at
the FTC's press office.
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95-190