The standards recognized by the anti-monopoly law are as follows:
1, the operator reached a monopoly agreement;
2. The operator abuses the dominant market position;
3. Concentration of operators that have or may have the effect of eliminating or restricting competition.
The constitutive requirements of the anti-monopoly law are as follows:
1. An agreement or cooperative behavior consists of several independent subjects. A monopoly agreement must occur between two or more competing operators, and it has the characteristics of "multiple subjects * * * peers", so it is different from the market monopoly behavior implemented by a single operator;
2. There is collusion or concerted action between operators. The objective element that constitutes a monopoly agreement is that the operators have colluded or acted in concert. This kind of collusion or concerted action can be manifested in agreements, contracts, memoranda signed by all parties, decisions or resolutions of enterprise groups, and concerted actions among actors;
3. Supervision of monopoly agreements.
Legal basis: Article 3 of the Anti-monopoly Law of the People's Republic of China
Monopoly behavior specifically includes:
(1) Monopoly agreement;
(2) Abuse of dominant market position;
(3) Concentration of business operators that have or may have the effect of eliminating or restricting competition;
(4) Abuse of administrative power to exclude and restrict competition.