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Atelier régional de formation sur l’application de loi
de concurrence
(les pays anglophones)
Janvier 13-15, 2010, Abuja, Nigeria
Dans les médias
West Africa:
Ecowas, NGOs Trace Root of African Poverty
Daily Independent, Nigeria, January 17, 2010
Consumer Rights:
ECOWAS, Stakeholders Seek Law Enforcement
THISDAY, Nigeria, January 15, 2010
West Africa: Ecowas, NGOs Trace Root of
African Poverty
Daily Independent, Nigeria, January 17, 2010
Abuja — Economic Community of
West African States (ECOWAS) and two civil society
organisations have blamed continued poverty scourge and
underdevelopment of most African countries on inadequate
competition law and policy.
ECOWAS Consumer Unity and Trust
Society (CUTS) International and Consumer Empowerment
Organisation of Nigerian (CEON) made this observation at a
regional training workshop on competition law enforcement in
Abuja at the weekend.
They noted that adequate
competition policy and law are momentum to economic
development of any economy.
According to CUTS
International's Centre Coordinator and Deputy Head, Rijit
Sengupa, over 100 countries, both in developed and
developing economies, have already adopted competition law
and policy, while others are considering or are in the
process of developing the policies.
Competition policies are
government measures that affect competition, by directly
affecting the behaviour of enterprises and the structures of
industries.
Rijit stated that competition
policy basically covers two elements, one of which involves
putting in place a set of policies that promotes competition
in local and international markets.
This particular set of policies,
he said, enables a relaxed industrial policy, liberalised
trade policy, easy exit and entry conditions, reduced
controls and greater reliance on market forces.
The second element which he
considered most critical includes legislations, judicial
decisions and regulations that specifically aim at
preventing anti-competitive business practices, avoiding
concentration and abuse of market power.
He said "although competition
law is part of competition policy, the majority of countries
started with the adoption of competition laws without any
competition policy in place."
Rijit said the most common
immediate objective of competition policy has been to
protect the process of competition and free market access.
This, he said, is achievable
through prevention and elimination of monopolies,
monopolistic practices and other restrictions for the
efficient functioning of markets to attain economic
efficiency in production.
The news
item can also be viewed at:
http://allafrica.com/
Consumer Rights: ECOWAS, Stakeholders Seek
Law Enforcement
THISDAY, Nigeria, January 15, 2010
Economic Community of West
African States (ECOWAS) and other stakeholders Wednesday in
Abuja, spoke on the need for a reliable competition law
enforcement to guide against the reckless abuse of consumers
rights.
This was stated at the on going
regional training workshop on Competition Law Enforcement
organised by the Consumers Empowerment Organization of
Nigeria (CEON) in conjunction with the Centre for
Competition Investment and Economic Regulation to sensitize
government agencies and individuals on the need to enact
laws that curtail anti-consumers rights.
While declaring the seminar
open, the Coordinator General, Adedeji Babatunde said, “the
purpose of the workshop is to equip participants on the
implementation from government agencies from selected
countries of West Africa with necessary skills and knowledge
on competition issues”
He further urged participants to
explore opportunities of the workshop to acquire necessary
skills needed that would enable them to contribute
effectively towards evolving effective national competition
regimes in their respective countries.
On his part, the ECOWAS
representative and Programme Officer Trade and Competition,
Dr Seydou Sacko observed that, ECOWAS was poised to
encourage member countries to enact enabling laws that will
nip in the bud cases of anti-consumers rights, the best to
start is by enforcement of competition laws, this will also
lead to more economic growth in the sub-region”, he said.
Also, representative of CUTS
International, Rijit Sengupta stated that, “the workshop is
to brainstorm the relevance of competition laws as regard
global trade”, adding that: the West African region must
brace with cogent laws to will protect consumers as well as
promote economic growth”.
The news
item can also be viewed at:
http://www.thisdayonline.com/
.
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