Competition Act 2002
Competition Act 2002
Competition Act 2002
Since attaining Independence in 1947,India, for the better part of half a century thereafter, adopted and followed policies comprising what are
known as Command-and-Control laws, rules, regulations and executive orders. The competition law of India, namely, the Monopolies and
Restrictive Trade Practices Act, 1969 (MRTP Act, for brief) was one such. It was in 1991 that widespread economic reforms were
undertaken and consequently the march from Command-and-Control economy to an economy based more on free market principles
commenced its stride. As is true of many countries, economic liberalisation has taken root in India and the need for an effective competition
regime has also been recognised.
In the context of the new economic policy paradigm, India has chosen to enact a new competition law called the Competition Act, 2002. The
MRTP Act has metamorphosed into the new law, Competition Act, 2002. The new law is designed to repeal the extant MRTP Act. As of
now, only a few provisions of the new law have been brought into force and the process of constituting the regulatory authority, namely, the
Competition Commission of India under the new Act, is on. The remaining provisions of the new law will be brought into force in a phased
manner. For the present, the outgoing law, MRTP Act, 1969 and the new law, Competition Act, 2002 are concurrently in force, though as
mentioned above, only some provisions of the new law have been brought into force.
Competition Law for India was triggered by Articles 38 and 39 of the Constitution of India. These Articles are a part of the Directive
Principles of State Policy. Pegging on the Directive Principles, the first Indian competition law was enacted in 1969 and was christened
the Monopolies And Restrictive Trade Practices, 1969 (MRTP Act). Articles 38 and 39 of the Constitution of India mandate, inter alia,
that the State shall strive to promote the welfare of the people by securing and protecting as effectively, as it may, a social order in which
justice social, economic and political shall inform all the institutions of the national life, and the State shall, in particular, direct its policy
towards securing.
1. That the ownership and control of material resources of the community are so distributed as best to subserve the common good; and
2. That the operation of the economic system does not result in the concentration of wealth and means of production to the common
detriment.
In October 1999, the Government of India appointed a High Level Committee on Competition Policy and Competition Law to advise a
modern competition law for the country in line with international developments and to suggest a legislative framework, which may entail a
new law or appropriate amendments to the MRTP Act. The Committee presented its Competition Policy report to the Government in May
2000 [the report will be referred to hereinafter as High Level Committee (2000)]. The draft competition law was drafted and presented to the
Government in November 2000. After some refinements, following extensive consultations and discussions with all interested parties, the
Parliament passed in December 2002 the new law, namely, the Competition Act, 2002.
# The Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 and the connected statutes need to be amended to provide for an easy exit to the non-viable, ill-managed
and inefficient units subject to their legal obligations in respect of their liabilities.
# The Board for Industrial Finance & Restructuring (BIFR) formulated under the provisions of Sick Industrial Companies (Special
Provisions) Act, 1985 should be abolished.
# MRTP Act
It is suggested that:
* The MRTP Act 1969 may be repealed and the MRTP Commission wound up. The provisions relating to unfair trade practices need not
figure in the Indian Competition Act as they are presently covered by the Consumer Protection Act, 1986.
* The pending UTP cases in the MRTP Commission may be transferred to the concerned consumer Courts under the Consumer Protection
Act, 1986. The pending MTP and RTP Cases in MRTP Commission may be taken up for adjudication by the CCI from the stages they are in.
Abuse Of Dominance
Dominant Position has been appropriately defined in the Act in terms of the position of strength, enjoyed by an enterprise, in the relevant
market, in India, which enables it to (i) operate independently of competitive forces prevailing in the relevant market; or (ii) affect its
competitors or consumers or the relevant market, in its favour.
Section 4 enjoins, No enterprise shall abuse its dominant position. Dominant position is the position of strength enjoyed by an enterprise in
the relevant market which enables it to operate independently of competitive forces prevailing in the market or affects its competitors or
consumers or the relevant market in its favour. Dominant position is abused when an enterprise imposes unfair or discriminatory conditions
in purchase or sale of goods or services or in the price in purchase or sale of goods or services. Again, the philosophy of the Competition Act
is reflected in this provision, where it is clarified that a situation of monopoly per se is not against public policy but, rather, the use of the
monopoly status such that it operates to the detriment of potential and actual competitors.
At this point it is worth mentioning that the Act does not prohibit or restrict enterprises from coming into dominance. There is no control
whatsoever to prevent enterprises from coming into or acquiring position of dominance. All that the Act prohibits is the abuse of that
dominant position. The Act therefore targets the abuse of dominance and not dominance per se. This is indeed a welcome step, a step towards
a truly global and liberal economy.
Herein again lies the key to understanding the Competition Act. The intent of the legislation is not to prevent the existence of a monopoly
across the board. There is a realisation in policy-making circles that in certain industries, the nature of their operations and economies of
scale indeed dictate the creation of a monopoly in order to be able to operate and remain viable and profitable. This is in significant contrast
to the philosophy, which propelled the operation and application of the MRTP Act, the trigger for which was the existence or impending
creation of a monopoly situation in a sector of industry.
The Act has made the pre-notification of combinations voluntary for the parties concerned. However, if the parties to the combination choose
not to notify the CCI, as it is not mandatory to notify, they run the risk of a post-combination action by the CCI, if it is discovered
subsequently, that the combination has an appreciable adverse effect on competition. There is a rider that the CCI shall not initiate an inquiry
into a combination after the expiry of one year from the date on which the combination has taken effect.
Competition Advocacy
In line with the High Level Committee's recommendation, the Act extends the mandate of the Competition Commission of India beyond
merely enforcing the law (High Level Committee, 2000). Competition advocacy creates a culture of competition. There are many possible
valuable roles for competition advocacy, depending on a country's legal and economic circumstances.
The Regulatory Authority under the Act, namely, Competition Commission of India (CCI), in terms of the advocacy provisions in the Act, is
enabled to participate in the formulation of the country's economic policies and to participate in the reviewing of laws related to competition
at the instance of the Central Government. The Central Government can make a reference to the CCI for its opinion on the possible effect of
a policy under formulation or of an existing law related to competition. The Commission will therefore be assuming the role of competition
advocate, acting pro-actively to bring about Government policies that lower barriers to entry, that promote deregulation and trade
liberalisation and that promote competition in the market place.
Perhaps one of the most crucial components of the Competition Act is contained in a single section under the chapter entitledcompetition
advocacy.
The 1996 Singapore Ministerial resolved to set up working groups on each of the Singapore issues. The mandate of the Working Group on
the Interaction between Trade and Competition Policy (WGTCP) was to study issues raised by Members relating to the interaction between
trade and competition policy, including anticompetitive practices in order to identify any areas that may merit further consideration in the
WTO framework. Consequently, the relevant paragraphs of the 2001 Doha Ministerial Declaration tried to give a development-friendly slant
to the issue. WGTCP discussions during the first few years of its existence were diffused and non-converging. Faced with a lack of consensus
on so many issues, the Doha Declaration of the 2001 Ministerial Conference of the WTO limited further discussion at the WGTCP to the
issue of hard-core cartels; application of the fundamental WTO principles of non- discrimination, transparency and procedural fairness in
competition policy; capacity building in developing countries; and voluntary cooperation between Members.
After the Act was placed on the web-site and came into the public domain, a question often asked is whether it is not still the old law in
substance although not in form. A clear answer to this question is in the title of this section. The Act is a new wine in a new bottle. The
differences between the old law (namely the MRTP Act, 1969) and the new law (the Competition Act, 2002) may perhaps be best captured in
the form of a table displayed below:
S.No MRTP Act, 1969 Competition Act, 2002
1 Based on the pre-reforms scenario Based on the post-reforms scenario
2 Based on size as a factor Based on structure as a factor
3 Competition offences implicit or not defined Competition offences explicit and defined
4 Complex in arrangement and language Simple in arrangement and language and easily
comprehensible
5 14 per se offences negating the principles of natural 4 per se offences and all the rest subjected to rule of reason.
justice
6 Frowns upon dominance Frowns upon abuse of dominance
7 Registration of agreements compulsory No requirement of registration of agreements
8 No combinations regulation Combinations regulated beyond a high threshold limit.
9 Competition Commission appointed by the Competition Commission selected by a Collegium (search
Government committee)
10 Very little administrative and financial autonomy for Relatively more autonomy for the Competition Commission
the Competition Commission
11 No competition advocacy role for the Competition Competition Commission has competition advocacy role
Commission
12 No penalties for offences Penalties for offences
13 Reactive and rigid Proactive and flexible
14 Unfair trade practices covered Unfair trade practices omitted (consumer fora will deal with
them)
15 Does not vest MRTP Commission to inquire into Competition Law seeks to regulate them.
cartels of foreign origin in a direct manner.
16 Concept of ‘Group’ Act had wider import and was Concept has been simplified
unworkable
The Act is therefore a new wine in a new bottle. Wine gets better as it ages. The proposed Law provides for a Competition fund, which shall
be utilised for promotion of competition advocacy, creating awareness about competition issues and training in accordance with the rules that
may be prescribed. The extent MRTP Act 1969 has aged for more than three decades and has given birth to the new law (the Act) in line with
the changed and changing economic scenario in India and rest of the world and in line with the current economic thinking comprising
liberalisation, privatisation and globalisation.
Conclusion
The message is loud yet clear that a well planned exhaustive competition compliance programme can be of great benefit to all enterprises
irrespective of their size, area of operation, jurisdiction involved, nature of products supplied or services rendered and the same is essential
for companies, its directors and the delegatee key corporate executives to avoid insurmountable hardships of monetary fines, civil
imprisonment, beside loss of hard-earned reputation when the Competition Authorities, the media and others reveal the misdeeds in public.
In the changed scenario, India do needs a fresh law for competition and a new regulatory authority, which under this policy is the
`Competition Commission of India’. The law will serve the purpose only if it is made independently, runs independently and is less
expensive.
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