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All about me. British economist; specialist in competition and regulationTo 1994: Degrees in economics in UK, followed by teaching at University of Namibia1994 1999 Consulting Economist, Coopers
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1. The Competition Commission of Mauritius John Davies, Executive Director
March 2009
Personal views, not to be attributed to the CCM
2. All about me British economist; specialist in competition and regulation
To 1994: Degrees in economics in UK, followed by teaching at University of Namibia
1994 – 1999 Consulting Economist, Coopers & Lybrand UK, then London Economics UK
1999 - 2003 Consulting Economist, Frontier Economics UK
2003 – 2008 UK Competition Commission: Deputy Chief Economist, then Chief Economist from 2005
2009 – 2011 Executive Director, Competition Commission of Mauritius
3. Overview What is competition policy?
The Competition Act 2007
The Competition Commission of Mauritius
Guidelines – some tensions
4. What is competition policy?
5. Competition Policy Also called antitrust, with roots in the US Sherman Act of 1890 and Clayton Act 1914
Then in Europe 1945-1990 and since 1990 increasingly common world-wide.
Legal arrangements differ but typically:
Prohibition of cartels: price-fixing and bid-rigging
Action against anti-competitive behaviour by monopolies
Control of mergers to prevent emergence of monopoly
Legalistic case-work not discretionary government ‘policy’
6. Why competition policy? Free competition between private sector firms:
good for consumer (lower prices, better quality, more choice)
Strong evidence that competition enhances productivity, innovation, and thus economic growth
Price fixing and abuse of monopoly (among many other things) limit free competition
So we intervene - but we should not interfere with businesses’ commercial decisions lightly or arbitrarily
Independent agency, operating under clear legal framework, with well-defined rights
Protect competition (rivalry) not competitors!
7. The Competition Act 2007
8. The Competition Act 2007 Passed by Parliament 2007, partially proclaimed at present
Defines restrictive practices
Establishes Competition Commission
Repeals Competition Act 2003
Simpler institutional structure
Stronger measures
Fewer exemptions
9. Restrictive practices Collusive agreements (price-fixing, bid-rigging, resale price maintenance)
Non-collusive agreements
Abuse of monopoly
Merger control
10. Market shares and market definition Monopoly situation when one company has at least 30%, or three or fewer companies 70%
30% or 70% of what?
“relevant market”: defined by substitution possibilities, not by any fixed product characteristics or geography
Monopoly not a breach of the law – abuse is
Percentages are safe harbours below which there can be no monopoly problem, they are not thresholds for intervention
11. Predatory pricing Allegations of ‘predatory pricing’ involve prices being too low
Harm to competition if (and only if):
Temporary period of low prices drives out competitors
In subsequent period, less competition leading to higher prices (exit must be irreversible) – outweighing the former effect
Very hard to distinguish from normal ‘tough’ competition: competition authorities require very clear proof to intervene
Businesses should never be deterred from competing on price by worries that this might be seen as predatory
Strong presumption in favour of low prices and tough competition
12. Key principles in the Act Effects-based judgment for all practices except cartels
Independence and division of powers
Transparency – public accountability
Transparency – natural justice and fairness
Right of appeal
State subject to the Act
13. The Competition Commission
14. Competition Commission Chairman heads five part-time commissioners who decide all cases
Executive Director (supported by 10-20 staff):
Chooses cases to investigate
Carries out investigation
Reports to commissioners
Writes and publishes final report
15. Competition Commission: process Decide to launch investigation
Investigations:
Powers to require production of information
Criminal offence to mislead the Commission
Analytical expertise: economic, legal and accounting
Hearings with the companies under investigation
Right of appeal and duty to give reasons
Also informal investigations and advice to government
16. Some early tasks Commissioners to be appointed
Appointment of senior staff:
Lawyers
Business specialists
Economists
Drafting three sets of Guidelines
Competition Advocacy
Open for business – want to hear about problems
Launch first investigations!
17. Guidelines: some tensions(for discussion)
18. Legal and economic guidelines
19. Procedural rules
20. Procedural rules
21. Procedural rules