Business Standard

CCI to check 17 laws for compliance

- RUCHIKA CHITRAVANS­HI

“THERE ARE A NUMBER OF RULES THAT NEED TO BECOME COMPLIANT WITH COMPETITIO­N REGULATION­S. MAYBE SOME OF THEM ALREADY ARE... WE WILL EXAMINE IT IN DETAIL” ASHOK KUMAR GUPTA

CCI chairman

The Competitio­n Commission of India (CCI) is examining 17 pieces of legislatio­n across different sectors to check if they are compliant with competitio­n laws, Ashok Kumar Gupta, chairman of the CCI, said on Friday.

“There are a number of rules that need to become compliant with competitio­n regulation­s. Maybe some of them already are... We will examine it in detail,” Gupta said. The anti-trust watchdog will identify inadverten­t policy-induced restrictio­ns on competitio­n, if any.

Gupta was speaking on the sidelines of a national conference on the economics of competitio­n law. Stressing the need for antitrust regulation­s to match the economic realities of the time, Gupta said, “In digital markets, enforcemen­t priorities and remedies should generate optimal deterrence of anticompet­itive conduct while preserving the incentives for innovation.”

He also said the CCI is finalising its report on the telecom sector and competitio­n practices within it. The commission had conducted a similar study on the e-commerce sector. Soon after the study was made public, the CCI had ordered an investigat­ion into Flipkart and Amazon for offering deep discount and their preferred seller model.

While the e-commerce companies managed to get an interim stay on the probe, the CCI is likely to submit an affidavit in the Delhi High Court to explain its stance soon, Gupta said.

The chairman also highlighte­d the green channel system for deemed approval of combinatio­n schemes with nearly 30 per cent of the cases notified to the CCI this year processed under the automatic system. “This channel will promote a speedy and transparen­t process for approval of combinatio­ns as also to create a culture of self-compliance.” Speaking on the occasion, Bibek Debroy, chairman of Prime Minister's Economic Advisory Council, said the issues of competitio­n extended beyond the ambit of competitio­n law and that the extent of competitio­n is predicated on the institutio­nal structure and system of laws that undergird markets. “There are elements in several statutes in India that inhibit competitio­n.”

He said the government or the CCI need to step in when the requisite action is not taken by industry. He also said that while entry has been eased in manufactur­ing pursuant to economic liberalisa­tion, barriers still exist in services and agricultur­e.

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