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A competition policy
for growth
Economic Times, September 29, 2009
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By Pradeep S Mehta
The
Planning Commission will soon be conducting a
mid-term review of the 11th five year plan
(2007-2012). It will also take a look at the issue
of a national competition policy, one of its
recommendations in its policy document "Inclusive
Growth" that was adopted by the National
Development Council in December 2007.
The
new government should revisit the same to ensure
that inclusive growth is promoted and poverty
reduced. Promoting competition is not only
important as a principle for providing a just
environment for all businesses, the fair race that
it initiates among rival firms, including small
producers, drives sustained growth.
It
also keeps prices low by curbing collusive as well
as monopoly pricing, as firms compete for
consumers by minimising costs through efficient
production.
India
adopted the new competition law in 2002.
Implemented after much delay, it replaced the
vastly ineffective Monopolies and Restrictive
Trade Practices Act of 1969. The older law was
more of a licensing law. To curb anti-competitive
practices, it had a mechanical approach: firms
came under the scanner only if they acquired
market dominance. And, it was the magnitude of
market shares that was important, not how such
market shares had been secured.
It is
important to realise that a competition law by
itself cannot ensure that the competitive spirit
and culture permeates deep into the economy. It
should be complemented by a national competition
policy (NCP) to push structural and legislative
reforms to promote competition in markets where it
is restricted.
The
competition law only focuses on the conduct of
firms and ensures that such conduct is consistent
with the spirit of fair play. However, distortions
could arise due to either another law or policy.
There are many such incongruities.
For
instance, the mineral policy restrict quantitative
extraction of minerals as well as sale of the
minerals by the licensee. Unless there are valid
social or environmental reasons, such policy
conditions may go against the spirit of
competition.
Use of
trade policy instruments such as anti-dumping —
without examining their deleterious effects on
downstream industries — on the basis of complaints
from domestic lobbies is another such recurring
phenomenon. Some sector specific regulators would
also implement laws that may vitiate the
competitive spirit.
The
NCP attempts to ensure congruity between all or
most national and state laws with the principles
of competition. That helps further the objectives
of a competition law — to foster competition in
all sectors of the economy and thereby induce
efficiency, innovation and growth.
For a
successful NCP, extensive advocacy and
consultation are needed. This requires the
cooperation and coordination of institutions such
as the competition commission, civil society
organisations, sector regulators and the
government. The primary motivating factor behind
the NCP is political will and priority accorded to
growth as a political objective.
Ensuring competitive neutrality is another crucial
aspect of the NCP — government businesses should
not enjoy any undue advantage over private
businesses. The requirement that government
officials fly only Air India goes against this
principle. Competitive neutrality is necessary to
ensure competition within and across public and
private enterprises.
The
Planning Commission had established a working
group on the NCP in 2007 to examine its various
facets. This working group has already raised
concerns over some policies, statutes and
regulations at the levels of the central and state
government that limit competition and has
recommended review of such policies through the
tool of competition impact assessment.
The
Australian approach towards competition policy can
be useful in the Indian context. There too, the
competition policy followed the competition law.
But, the competition policy was preceded by an
extensive review of all legislation from the
competition perspective, and all laws and measures
that had provisions (over 2,000 in number)
violating the spirit of competition were repealed
or amended.
The
envisaged NCP approach would ensure equitable
application of competition rules to all economic
agents in the economy. It works on the principle
that social welfare is best served by promoting
competition.
Once
adopted, the central government in coordination
with the state governments should ensure that NCP
is implemented uniformly across the country,
particularly in respect of structural reform of
public monopolies, review of anti-competitive
legislation and regulation and the elimination of
undue advantages enjoyed by government businesses
where they compete with the private sector.
The
NCP is an important step forward in establishing a
consistent national economic framework to promote
and maintain competition in all sectors of the
economy. This, however, is clearly only an initial
step in initiating wide ranging reforms to
generate a culture and spirit of competition in
the economy.
The author
is
Secretary General, CUTS International
and can be reached at
psm@cuts.org.
This article can also be viewed at:
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/
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