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August 2021

anti trust legislation

India Needs Genuine Anti Trust Legislation to Control Corporate Monopolies

By Corporate Law, Others No Comments

Anti Trust Legislation to Control Corporate Monopolies

When one takes a picture of the entire world, it becomes quite clear that the problems of concentration of economic power, monopoly, and restrictive trade practices are present in almost all the democratic countries of the world. However, with increasing globalization and industrialization, competition among companies and countries is becoming vigorous and complicated leading to monopolistic tendencies.

Monopoly market, a market where avarice and profit-making drive decision making, social welfare usually takes a backseat. Apparently, Adam Smith’s free-market economy pivots around the quintessential prospect of minimal government intervention so that markets can self-regulate and operate rationally. Unfortunately, in most cases, such an unregulated environment allows the rise of monopolies through organic or inorganic growth.

During the time of license raj, monopolies and the Restrictive Trade Practices Commission were denounced by all shades of liberal opinion. However, even after the British raj, monopiles persisted due to India’s socialistic and archaic structure. However, such a detestable taste in expansion and restricted entry in the market was altered in 1991 through LPG policies.

Need for Antitrust laws

It is no news that the exponential rise of big techs like Google, Apple, Amazon, Facebook, etc. mimics the dominance enjoyed by these particular trusts in various vulnerable markets. Over the past years, according to their conduct and corporate behavior, many of these firms have systematically engaged in predatory conduct to drive out competition by various ways of “killer acquisitions”.

Though the monopoly situation of Microsoft was buried long ago in 2001, the embers have again been fanned with a growing consensus that big tech now wields overwhelming power, so much so that they cause tangible harm to competitors and consumers alike. Given Amazon’s alleged report of mistreatment of its employees, with plummeting social welfare, such monopolies need curtailment.

Now, if the problem is considered in the Indian context, such firms do operate in India too, to such a large extent that they are increasingly taking over the e-commerce and welfare sector in India. Given the precarious presence of such tech giants in the country, it is time that India starts considering a revamp strategy for its anti-trust laws.
As aforementioned, the impact of the west’s events in India cannot be, by any chance, downplayed.

Given the globalized era that we live in, the Competition Commission of India (CCI) has a penchant to mirror the US and the EU antitrust authorities. Thus, given the EU and US antitrust bodies’ stringent stand against tech giants like Facebook, WhatsApp, etc., there is a high probability that the CCI might initiate investigations to assess the detestable dominance of big tech firms in India and assess the requirement for a breakup of various power-wielding corporations.

But are India’s Antitrust laws ready for such significant change? Perhaps not. The western countries were the first to introduce the mammoth Competition laws to mitigate unfair advantages that money mongers enjoyed and to divest monopolies to protect the competitive integrity of relevant markets. But the story of the Competition Commission of India is quite different.

It is to be noted that the Indian competition law is not bothered about dominance by any single money monger or player in the market. The competition commission of India only objects to the use of such prominent power by an entity to unfairly control the market and manipulate prices for their products and services.

This particular denial of the competition act of 2002, to weed out the prerequisites for the determination of unfair dominance is in sharp contrast to the western antitrust laws which emphatically view every move by companies to consolidate their position with suspicion. Such a western approach has its merits, which kills unfair monopolies in their nascent stage.

Moreover, Section 28 of the Competition Act, 2002 which effectively empowers the CCI to divide a dominant firm to ensure that no firm can abuse its dominant position is ill-planned and doesn’t lay out a coherent, robust foundation for the act. This is due to the fact that the said section does not effectively require the CCI to make an actual finding of abuse to direct a firm’s division. It is to be noted that just mere apprehension of abuse by a dominant firm is sufficient to trigger the operation of this provision.

Thus, it is quite surprising that the robust foundation on which CCI laws are based is ill-defined and thus ill-omened. The Act itself does not effectively provide any guidance for determining justifiable triggers. Mere apprehension, in many cases, can lead to unjustifiable and ill-omened divestment because many firms go for mergers and acquisitions to expand capital and to earn large-scale benefits and economies of scale, which as a matter of fact is good for the economy. But a mere apprehension of an unjust takeover can have debilitating consequences.

Thus, such apprehensions, can in many cases also lead to slower growth, a restrictive business environment, and the threat of being mishandled. Given India’s NPA crisis, acquisition and merger seem to be the perfect ways out for various debilitating firms, thus mere apprehension as a base of divestment and antitrust procedures does not speak well of the antitrust laws in India. But on the other hand, this lack of guidance severely expands the scope of this provision and strengthens the CCI’s power.

But even after such ‘turbo-charged anti-competition law, Indian corporates have grown immensely and have associated themselves with everything that is undesirable in corporate clout. The reason why such leniency takes place in dealing with the big fish is politics and lousy policy formulation.

Some glaring examples of the same are Reliance Jio and ‘Salt to Steel’, a nice catch line associated with Tatas for a long. There is hardly any activity that one can cite, where these group entities are not present in India. In fact, Reliance has expanded so much across India that even the agriculture sector has not been spared of its charms. Reliance’s hold on the agriculture sector has already become all-pervading, with no specific sphere of activity, that one can think of, which has been spared.

Reliance’s footprint in the country’s agricultural sector might be new but Mr. Anil Ambani is leaving no stone unturned to sweep the market with his all-pervading presence. As a matter of fact, Reliance has launched an all-encompassing ‘farm-to-fork business’, which offers to deliver on many grounds like providing prominent help with the delivery cycle from harvest to the store by sourcing nearly half of all vegetables and fruits required for its retail chain. It is to be noted that this has grown by leaps and bounds through meticulously planned acquisitions and yet CCI has never been apprehensive about it.

Thus, all in all, in view of the fast-paced development, the recent surge of investigations by the CCI against big techs like Google and Amazon and the growing power of Ambanis, Adanis, and Tatas in the country can significantly and effectively act as a catalyst for the CCI to test the waters within the realm of its powers.

Thus, in order to maintain a balanced equilibrium between encouraging healthy competition and ensuring companies adhere to Anti-Trust laws, it is imperative to set a strong narrative against global giants operating in India according to their whims and fancies and therefore it will be interesting to witness how a genuine Anti-Trust Legislation to control corporate monopolies will take effect in India.

 


Tags: corporate monopolies, restrictive trade practices, anti trust legislation, monopolistic tendencies, monopolistic competition, monopoly market

ipr bride and competition groom

The IPR Bride and Competition Groom

By Corporate Law, Real Estate No Comments

IPR Bride and Competition Groom

The laws on intellectual property rights (IPRs) and competition have evolved historically as two separate systems. The traditional role of competition law has been to promote efficiency in the market and thereby prevent market distortions whereas the role of IPR has been the promotion of innovations by granting protection and rights over inventions.

The general perception is that there is an inherent tension between IPR and competition law. Proof of this is the rise in the number of intellectual property-related competition cases in the recent past across jurisdictions. India too has had her share of litigations in the matter.

In an unprecedented situation, that the world finds itself in, not only have hardships been presented but a plethora of things to learn have been presented too. Being an unprecedented tragedy, it has made the world face a classic clash of utmost importance- the dichotomy between IPR rights and competition laws.

Given the virulent nature of the virus, which brought the world economy to its knees, the world’s leading pharma companies have been arduously racing forward at a feverish pace to find a vaccine for COVID-19. Pharma companies, given their successful discovery, at the moment, are relishing extravagant, lucrative profits with their IP rights. Thus this begs a pertinent question that is such kind of insane amounts of profits justified? Given the fact, that Pharma laboratories typically face very heavy odds since only one in dozens of experiments succeeds, it would be termed as being ignorant, in not supporting such profits or rather deserved remuneration.

With thousands of failed attempts, attempts are emphatically made to compensate the costs of all such failed trials on to the price of the one successful invention, here the covid vaccine. Additionally, to be able to earn profits throughout, patenting their intellectual property which makes it illegal for rivals to copy their process, comes across as the most viable solution.

Public policy dilemma

In granting such controversial rights, which might lead to mitigation of competition and perhaps even exploitation, governments emphatically face a public policy dilemma. This is because, in pursuit of high, sustained profits, pricing is usually kept high. The high cost of the product, in the current scenario– the vaccine, makes it unaffordable for low-income households which emphatically dims the potential and robustness of the covid fighting efforts.

Given the current scenario, the world is poorer than it was during-pandemic level. A study suggests that Indians are now poorer by 6.1%. In addition to this study, another study by Azim Premji University states that more than 235 million households’ incomes have slipped below the minimum income in India. Thus, if such facts are carefully deciphered, lower affordability leading to a lower probability of getting vaccinated amidst a detestable, soul-wrenching pandemic, can effectively be termed as exploitation.

Scrutinizing the other face of the coin, if such rights are not granted to the pharma companies, who consequently will not be able to ask for monopolistic pricing power through the protection of IPR, they will have no incentive to invest in development and research, which at the moment is the holy grail for the public and economics’ health.

The law of economics

As a simple law of economics, it is effectively stated that competitive markets maximize consumer, producer, and societal welfare. This is due to the mere fact that healthy competition ensures efficiency and innovation. It is due to this very reason that monopolies around the world are mitigated with conscious efforts. But a conundrum that government faces is that in addition to stringent competition laws, the government’s books of laws also contain IPR laws that create monopolies. In contrast to IPR laws, competition laws curb monopolies.

If scrutinized closely, it can be deciphered that there is an apparent tension between IPR and competition laws and that it is an interesting dichotomy, but a false one. In practical terms, IPR and competition law need to work in harmony. This is due to a very significant reason that IPR gives market power but competition law ensures that such market power is exercised within limits.

It is no news, that necessity is the mother of invention and modern times need innovation. Such innovation has emphatically been the wellspring of human civilization. It is due to such innovation that conventional technologies have been upgraded to ease human life, it is due to this innovation that the industrial revolution has been transformed into the Digital Revolution, currently underway, that is significantly changing our lives in ways that we do not even fully comprehend.

It is to be noted that the central ideas that provide such incentives for innovation are the IPR laws and the competition law. In a much-unadorned explanation, the two laws apparently of conflicting regimes when joined in a harmonious marriage produce a symbiotic effect that drives insane progress and maximizes consumer welfare and producer’s efficiency.

It is to be noted that the two, in the economic world, cannot be separated. Why? Because IPR laws bring in innovation, inquisitiveness, and invention which is highly crucial for economic development and research domain. Similarly, competition laws bring inefficiency in the market with the efficient allocation of resources. In the world, both laws have their prime usage.

IPR laws, at the moment, are aiding the pharmaceutical sector and the competition law is aiming to dilute the power of e-commerce giants who are displaying rudimentary and advanced forms of corporate unethical and inefficient behavior.

But given the digital age we live in, are IPR and competition laws that have been written in the context of old technologies equipped to handle the new and complex issues posed by digital technologies? Given the scrutiny that various e-commerce giants like Apple, Amazon, Facebook, and Google face, it won’t be farther away from the truth to state, that crux of the laws is adaptive. In addition to the stringent scrutiny these tech giants face by western country legislatures and regulators, we witness this play out in India too in several instances.

In conclusion, it can be observed that the relationship between competition and IPR with its intricacies and ironies is here to stay. It is amply clear that these two streams of law are bound to converge and cannot be expected to stay as watertight compartments exclusive of each other. Thus, given the importance of both laws, the clash between the two is not only unwanted but also quite detestable. Therefore, harmonious marriage between the two is desirable and necessary.

 


Tags: competition groom, traditional role, ipr bride and competition groom, competition law, competition act