2. c. 68) was an act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom intended to enforce competition, and provide an appropriate check on restrictive combines and practices.
It required that any agreement between companies that restricted trading should be placed on a public register unless granted exemption by the Secretary of State.
[1] The registrar could refer any agreements which appeared to operate against the public interest to the Restrictive Practices Court, a senior court of record in the United Kingdom.
[2] Though the court was overhauled by the Restrictive Practices Court Act 1976 (c. 33),[3] by the end of the century, the legislation was perceived as increasingly out of line with Articles 81 and 82 of the Treaty of Rome.
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