BRUSSELS, Oct 8 (Reuters) - The European Commission will relaunch a debate next month on a controversial plan to help consumers launch class-action lawsuits to seek compensation for anticompetitive practices, according to a Commission document.
Former Competition Commissioner Neelie Kroes tried to lay out rules last year that would make it easier for consumers who suffer at the hands of companies that fix prices or abuse their dominant market position to take them to court.
But the proposals were shelved after criticism from companies worried about U.S.-style class-action lawsuits and the possibility of hefty punitive damages. Class actions are rare in Europe.
Interested parties will be able to give their views during a consultation that will run until the end of February, the document showed.
In a May report commissioned by European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso, elder statesman Mario Monti said it should be easier for victims of unfair business behaviour to be compensated in order to boost consumer confidence in the single market. (Reporting by Foo Yun Chee; Editing by Will Waterman)