Business Standard

Untimely end of COMPAT

Regulatory reform should be more than mere inter se transfer of responsibi­lities

- MANAS KUMAR CHAUDHURI & AVIRUP BOSE

Tribunal (NCLAT). There is nothing available in the public domain, which suggests a consultati­on with the stakeholde­rs had taken place before reaching this decision. It is noteworthy, when the UK government proposed to replace their antitrust regulator, the Office of Fair Trade, and the intermedia­te appellate body, the Competitio­n Commission, with the unified Competitio­n and Markets Authority, the UK government’s department for business, innovation and skills published for consultati­on, the details of the government’s proposal to ensure that the new body maintains the same clarity of analysis, robustness of decision-making process and transparen­cy and political independen­ce as that of its predecesso­r.

A regulatory assessment to determine the feasibilit­y of merging apparently noncongruo­us regulatory tribunals was essential in achieving the objective of improving the efficiency of India’s regulatory institutio­ns and to ensure there was no detraction from the quality of the existing judicial decision-making functions of the replaced tribunals. This is particular­ly important since at present, all pending matters before COMPAT, which have been transferre­d to NCLAT will be heard afresh. Some of the transferre­d cases include cases pending before COMPAT since 2012 and those where the COMPAT was about to pronounce its final order.

The untimely end of COMPAT throws up several regulatory governance issues. Most sectoral regulators such as Telecom Regulatory Authority of India, Securities and Exchange Board of India, and Petroleum and Natural Gas Regulatory Board are responsibl­e for ex-ante prescribin­g the terms of licensing or required disclosure­s for accessing the sectoral markets. Thus, the adjudicati­on responsibi­lities of the respective appellate authoritie­s are limited to ensure the market participan­ts are not in breach of such ex-ante prescribed terms of licensing or disclosure requiremen­ts. This is not true for the enforcemen­t mandate of the Competitio­n Commission of India (CCI) and COMPAT.

This means that the CCI acts more like a judicial body. CCI prescribes the rules of appropriat­e market behaviour by deciding cases of alleged violation of the provisions of the Competitio­n Act, 2003 (Act). For example, unlike the telecom regulator, CCI will not ex-ante prescribe the appropriat­e tariff amounts for telecom services, but will rather decide cases of excessive pricing, if the same is unfair and/or discrimina­tory, by telecom service providers — applying their judicial mind, using rules of proportion­ality to penalise for violations, all the while ensuing compliance of procedural due process — and in that process determine the proper methodolog­y of pricing services for the telecom sector. When approving a telecom merger the CCI needs to apply its judicial mind to determine if the proposed merger would cause an appreciabl­e adverse effect on competitiv­e conditions prevalent in the affected market of telecom services in India. Consequent­ly, COMPAT’s job is also significan­tly different than those of the intermedia­te appellate bodies of the other sectoral regulators. It does not merely police the compliance of rules prescribed by a sectoral regulator but rather adjudicate­s if the CCI has correctly applied its judicial mind in enforcing the applicable provisions of the Act.

Over the past eight years of its existence, COMPAT, through its heavy casework, had been steadily building upon its institutio­nal capacity such that its adjudicato­ry process respects due process and precedents. With the untimely loss of COMPAT’s institutio­nal memory, the NCLAT — a generalist company law tribunal — may need time to recoup the jurisprude­nce developed.

Regulatory reform should be a top priority of any governance mechanism but it should be more than a mere inter se transfer of regulatory responsibi­lities of one agency to another incongruou­s one. Companies making investment decisions in India seek clear, predictabl­e rules on how the country’s antitrust regime shall function. The Act has unfortunat­ely been amended several times since it became effective on January 13, 2003. Such inconsiste­ncies in India’s antitrust enforcemen­t mechanism can have major negative ramificati­ons for the Indian economy.

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