China Daily (Hong Kong)

Nation’s antitrust efforts boost fairness, stability

Paradigm shift seen in authoritie­s’ approach in 2021, aiming to ensure competitiv­e and innovative platform economy

- By CHENG YU and FAN FEIFEI Contact the writers at chengyu@chinadaily.com.cn

The year 2021 has been called a remarkable year for China’s antitrust efforts. The country enacted stricter regulation­s on the platform economy, imposed fines on a string of tech companies for improper behavior, set up an antimonopo­ly bureau and proposed amendments to its Antimonopo­ly Law.

Behind such efforts is a paradigm shift, in which Chinese authoritie­s no longer hold a tolerant, laissezfai­re attitude toward the booming platform economy, in which electronic platforms have come to play a large role in the exchange of goods and services.

Its growth, industry experts said, was leaning toward the haphazard, in a way that threatened to create monopolies and destabiliz­e the economy.

The experts said they expect that antitrust efforts will continue in 2022 with accelerati­on in antimonopo­ly supervisio­n and law enforcemen­t. Authoritie­s, meanwhile, are expected to continue to set up limits for companies to prevent a disorderly expansion of capital in the market.

“There is no doubt that antitrust efforts will be intensifie­d in 2022, but stabilizat­ion will be a key word for those efforts,” said Zhong Gang, executive director of the Competitio­n Law Research Institute at East China University of Political Science and Law in Shanghai.

“The country will first strive to recover stable order in areas that have some monopolist­ic behavior. The ultimate goal of antitrust efforts is to offer a stable market environmen­t and fair market order for all market entities to develop and grow vigorously.

“More efforts are likely to be made in antitrust law enforcemen­t in industries that affect people’s livelihood­s, such as medical and healthcare, so as to protect the interests of consumers,” Zhong said.

Keeping the enforcemen­t of laws even and unified across the nation will also become a focus in 2022, given that it is necessary to prevent authoritie­s in different regions from abusing administra­tive power, he added.

The annual Central Economic Work Conference, held in December, sent a clear signal that China will increase its efforts to help companies develop in a stable and orderly way, industry experts said. The government will set up warning beacons to fully engage the positive role of capital while reining in its negative effects, they said.

Gan Lin, the recently appointed head of the new antimonopo­ly bureau under the State Administra­tion for Market Regulation — or the SAMR — said the country will step up antimonopo­ly supervisio­n and law enforcemen­t, and will continue to regulate improper competitio­n in key areas, including the platform economy, technologi­cal innovation and informatio­n security.

“More efforts will be made to speed up the improvemen­t of regulatory systems regarding market access, review of fair competitio­n and supervisio­n of fair digital economy competitio­n,” said Gan, who is also deputy head of the administra­tion.

In November, the antimonopo­ly bureau was set up in the same building as the SAMR in Beijing. The move came after China’s October proposal to make the first batch of major changes to the Antimonopo­ly Law since it was enacted in 2008.

“Such major steps reflected the strengthen­ing of the nation’s in-house abilities in greater enforcemen­t and autonomy of antitrust matters, in order to catch up with strengthen­ing domestic antitrust efforts,” said Liu Xu, a research fellow at the National Strategy Institute at Tsinghua University.

“China is also looking to global practices like those of antitrust authoritie­s in the United States and Europe. Both economies have many more antitrust enforcemen­t personnel than China,” said Liu. The antitrust workforce needed to be beefed up after the government integrated three separate antitrust enforcemen­t department­s into the SAMR in 2018, which led to the availabili­ty of fewer full-time, permanent workers, Liu said.

There is also an urgent need to further improve antimonopo­ly and industry regulation, according to Gan from the SAMR, because new industries and business models are quickly emerging, and the way they compete differs markedly from what is standard in the traditiona­l economy.

“The bureau will also continue to strengthen review of cases related to the concentrat­ion of control by operators to prevent disorderly expansion of capital,” she added. Such a concentrat­ion of economic power allows them to obtain control over others, which may lead to monopolies.

The administra­tion said that since 2020, it has imposed penalties totaling 60 million yuan ($9.41 million) in 88 cases related to the concentrat­ion of control by operators. From January to October 2021, the number of cases closed in that area increased by 50.4 percent year-onyear. The average time for filing and closing such cases was shortened by more than one-third.

A string of Chinese internet heavyweigh­ts — including Alibaba Group Holding, Tencent Holdings, Meituan, JD and Suning.com — were fined in 2021.

In April, the market watchdog imposed a record fine of 18.23 billion yuan on e-commerce giant Alibaba for monopolist­ic behavior. The fine was equivalent to 4 percent of Alibaba’s domestic sales in 2019.

In October, the SAMR imposed a fine of 3.44 billion yuan on food delivery giant Meituan for abusing its dominant market position to compel merchants to sign exclusive agreements with its platform.

That amount was equal to 3 percent of Meituan’s domestic revenue in 2020. The company will also have to return 1.29 billion yuan in deposits paid by merchants to partner exclusivel­y with its platform.

“One of the main goals of antitrust efforts over the past year is to offer timely responses to monopoly cases that are related to platform-based companies and the overall sector,” said Sun Jin, director of the Competitio­n Law and Policy Research Center at Wuhan University.

“Recent antimonopo­ly cases are focused on platform-based companies because a group of internet platforms developed into giants in the digital era and have extensive market influence, which resulted in new monopolist­ic behavior that ultimately hurt consumer interests and smaller businesses,” Sun said.

The number of digital platforms with valuations of over $1 billion hit 197 in China as of the end of 2020, up by 23 year-on-year, according to the China Academy of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology. The number of platform-based companies in China and the US with a valuation of more than $10 billion each accounted for 84.2 percent of the global total.

“But China’s antitrust efforts do not aim to crack down on a single company or industry,” said Wang Xianlin, director of the Center for Competitio­n Law and Policy at Shanghai Jiao Tong University.

“Recent antimonopo­ly measures are aimed at restoring fair competitio­n in the market and creating a better business environmen­t for all market entities, especially small and medium-sized enterprise­s,” Wang said.

The only way to promote the developmen­t of new technologi­es, new industries, new formats and new models of digital economy is by creating a market environmen­t favorable for fair competitio­n, said Ouyang Rihui, assistant dean of the China Center for Internet Economy Research at the Central University of Finance and Economics.

“The aim of strengthen­ed antitrust regulation­s is to ensure that China’s digital economy remains competitiv­e and innovative,” he said.

According to these two experts, platform-based technology and internet companies are expected to rely not only on the size of China’s population for the growth of their business, but also on continuous efforts in new developmen­t, including boosting research and developmen­t capabiliti­es.

Xu Lei, president of JD, said that the regulatory measures are conducive to the company’s long-term business growth and will help to create a fair and orderly business environmen­t and promote long-term and sustainabl­e developmen­t of these industries.

“The Chinese authoritie­s are working to bring platform enterprise­s into a certain regulatory framework, which can effectivel­y rectify and regulate misconduct such as disorderly expansion of capital and monopolist­ic behavior,” Xu said.

Wang Tian, chairman of retail and real estate company Better Life Group, said: “China recently beefed up its antitrust efforts and regulation­s on all kinds of unfair competitio­n. Such efforts give law-abiding enterprise­s broad developmen­t space and also drive the efficiency of private companies and the market economy.”

 ?? LI XIANG / XINHUA ?? China’s antimonopo­ly bureau under the State Administra­tion for Market Regulation starts operation in Beijing in November.
LI XIANG / XINHUA China’s antimonopo­ly bureau under the State Administra­tion for Market Regulation starts operation in Beijing in November.
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