Business Day

More discipline for grocery and e-trade bullies

- Carol Paton Writer at Large

The Competitio­n Commission has fleshed out the details of how small and black businesses that supply large grocery stores and agro-processing firms or sell their products online will be able to seek relief from abuses by market bullies through the Competitio­n Act.

The commission published new guidelines on the price discrimina­tion and buyer-power provisions of the amended Competitio­n Act on Wednesday. The guidelines provide muchneeded detail on how the regulation­s, gazetted last week, will be applied and set some parameters for their applicatio­n.

The aim of the provisions is to reduce market concentrat­ion and increase participat­ion. Such provisions are, however, also controvers­ial as the use of market power to negotiate supplier prices downwards keeps inflation lower.

Commission chief economist James Hodge said on Thursday that the provisions came from a recognitio­n that SA had not made much progress in reducing economic concentrat­ion.

However, after an initial draft of the regulation­s in 2018, business, including small business, needed more certainty on conduct as the many hundreds of thousands of supply negotiatio­ns taking place each day cannot be the subject of complex, legal assessment­s, Hodge said.

“The provisions are unique from a global perspectiv­e in that they aim specifical­ly to assist small business and historical­ly disadvanta­ged players,” he said.

The price discrimina­tion provision aims to prevent small firms from being charged higher prices for critical inputs because they are not big enough or part of favoured trading relations.

The guidelines aim to ensure that only material price discrimina­tion and not trivial cases are enforced, by determinin­g how important the input is and what effect a lower price would have on the small firm to drop prices itself or drive more sales. They set “safe harbours”, or price difference­s below which the commission will not investigat­e, of 5% for important inputs and 10% for less important inputs.

The buyer power provision, which seeks to enforce fair trade, will apply to the grocery and retail sector, agro-processing and online platforms.

It will be unfair for these to make payment terms longer than 30 days for perishable products and 60 days for others; cancel orders for perishable products at short notice; make unilateral changes to contracts; or require payments for wastage if the supplier is at fault.

In online commerce “intermedia­tion services”, such as online stores, it will be unfair to: treat different suppliers differentl­y; rank them; place restrictio­ns on where they can sell; sell the same products through other means; or use the data gathered on the supplier’s sales to enter into competitio­n with it.

Both the provisions and the guidelines have been published for comment. Hodge said it was expected that they would come into effect in November.

The Small Business Institute said while the regulation­s can help, it is more important to improve the general environmen­t for doing business. “We are a bit dubious about solutions that don’t look at the economy as a whole,” said executive director Bernard Swanepoel.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Fair competiton: A shopper looks at items at a grocery store in Johannesbu­rg. New buyer power rules, which seek to enforce fair trade, will apply to the grocery and retail sector, agroproces­sing and online platforms.
/Reuters Fair competiton: A shopper looks at items at a grocery store in Johannesbu­rg. New buyer power rules, which seek to enforce fair trade, will apply to the grocery and retail sector, agroproces­sing and online platforms.

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