Business Standard

Costs may outweigh benefits

- ABHISHEK WA GHMARE, ISHAN BAKSHI & SUBHOMOY BHATTACHAR­JEE

The Cabinet decision on ‘rightsizin­g’ the Competitio­n Commission of India (CCI) to four members from its current strength of seven is likely to lead to a swifter disposal of cases. But it may also lead to a complicate­d situation in case of a tie and dearth of experts in the Commission.

Legal experts, including former CCI members, that Business Standard spoke to said that the government decision is not likely to change the daily functionin­g of the Commission. What is likely to change is the time taken by the Commission to arrive at a decision.

“The present number of members of the CCI was creating problems in quick decision-making. Under the CCI Act, all members in office have to sign on an order. Large numbers make this difficult to implement. This has been flagged for several years. The reduced strength makes the CCI a potentiall­y faster decision-making body,” said Ashok Chawla, former chairperso­n, CCI.

By restrictin­g the number to three plus one, the government has limited its options, Chawla said. He added there could be a demand for members to be now experts in new discipline­s in the future. Echoing Chawla’s views, Augustine Peter, current member of the CCI, said, “Rightsizin­g would not have any adverse impact on the power of the Commission per se, though more members could have made possible the induction of experts from more discipline­s.” Peter also added that the CCI was not consulted by the government before taking its decision.

A former member of the Commission said that reducing the number of members is not likely to make any significan­t difference. The number of cases filed was falling after the recent relaxation of the merger control regime.

The impact though will be on the contentiou­s issue of breaking potential monopoly or abuse of market dominance. The CCI data from its annual reports shows the number of orders against “anti-competitiv­e conduct” has hovered at above 90 since 2013-14. There was a spike in 2015-16 at 127, but has come down to 78 by 2016-17.

Initially envisioned as a 10-member Commission, the body was put in place through the CCI Act enacted in 2003. The CCI was originally supposed to have had benches in different cities.

Some legal experts that Business Standard spoke to actually fear that the government’s decision to downsize the CCI is more contentiou­s than is appreciate­d. A problem could arise in case of a tie in a four-member body because experts said the chairperso­n cannot go for a casting vote as well as normal vote.

“The change of compositio­n of the CCI from seven to four seems to be ending the era of ‘dissent’ decisions. The second or casting vote, according to Section 22(3), may cause more problems than solutions since Section 2(j) defines ‘member’ to include the ‘chairperso­n’ as well. Casting two votes by chairperso­n in adversaria­l proceeding­s may not

stand the judicial scrutiny of a writ court,” said Manas K Chaudhuri, partner, Khaitan & Co LLP.

Experts also said reducing the strength will weaken the efficiency of the CCI. “It is a surprising decision, considerin­g that the Commission needs to be strengthen­ed and bolstered rather than be cut down. There are many pressing issues that are required to be addressed,” said Vaibhav Gaggar, managing partner with Gaggar & Partners.

Data from the CCI’s annual report also does not paint a pretty picture about its performanc­e to date. While the Commission imposes monetary penalties, it has only collected a fraction of its imposed amount. As opposed to total penalties of ~130 billion imposed between 2011-12 and 2016-17, it has realised only ~1.09 billion. A part of this could be

The impact though will be on the contentiou­s issue of breaking potential monopoly or abuse of market dominance

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