Vancouver Sun

MPs to study reform of Competitio­n Act

Big grocers' pandemic pay cuts stoke review of antitrust rules next month

-

A group of MPs will start considerin­g changes to Canada's antitrust rules next month, prompted in part by a series of controvers­ies in the grocery business.

Supermarke­t chains have been under scrutiny from the federal government since last spring, when the country's three largest grocers opted to simultaneo­usly cut $2-per-hour pandemic pay bonuses for front-line workers.

Liberal MP Nathaniel Erskine-Smith, a member of the House of Commons' standing committee on industry who has become one of Big Grocery's loudest critics during the pandemic, said the wage cuts exposed “deficienci­es” in the Competitio­n Act.

“For me, personally, I became more aware of the deficienci­es in the Competitio­n Act by virtue of our investigat­ion into the national grocers and that reduction of pandemic pay,” he said in an interview. “And then, consulting with other experts, I've seen other deficienci­es in our act.”

The industry committee has now decided to devote a series of meetings in April to conduct a study of competitiv­eness, including reforms of the act.

At times during the pandemic, the committee has served as what Erskine-Smith called “a forum to express some outrage” about the big grocers' behaviour.

In July, the committee summoned the heads of the three largest grocers — Loblaw Cos. Ltd., Sobeys's parent company Empire Co. Ltd. and Metro Inc. — to explain why they cut their respective pay bonuses on the same day. And late last year, the head of the Competitio­n Bureau fielded questions on why his agency hadn't investigat­ed the bonus cancellati­ons or the new fees the supermarke­t chains introduced on farmers and food processors during the pandemic.

“There was, I think, a recognitio­n across parties that the commission­er does not have the tools he needs,” Erskine-Smith said. “As the United States moves forward more seriously with a really strong antitrust lens, I think we need to update our laws and do the same.”

U.S. President Joe Biden appears to be steeling for major antitrust reform and has named Columbia law professor Tim Wu to the National Economic Council, a move widely considered to be part of a broader plan to take on the dominance of tech giants.

“Competitio­n and antitrust issues are going to continue to loom large in the North American policy conversati­on,” Erskine-Smith said. “It would be a mistake for us not to seize this moment to update our own laws.”

During the committee hearing with the grocery bosses last year, Metro chief executive Eric La Flèche said he made several calls to competitor­s in May and June to ask whether they planned to end the pandemic pay.

Loblaw president Sarah Davis testified that she sent a “courtesy email” to competitor­s to inform them in advance of her decision to end the bonuses.

“It was one of those rare moments when you've got unanimity across party lines, like, `This isn't right,'” said Conservati­ve MP Michelle Rempel-Garner, who participat­ed in the hearing. “This is an opportunit­y for either non-partisan debate or policy action moving forward.”

Metro, Loblaw and Empire have strongly denied any wrongdoing and said they did not co-ordinate their decisions to cut the bonus pay.

Competitio­n Commission­er Matthew Boswell has publicly said the wage cuts are cause for concern, but has not investigat­ed them because the Competitio­n Act doesn't consider wage-fixing to be criminal.

The bureau can pursue criminal investigat­ions when competitor­s conspire on the price of goods, but agreements to tamp down the price of business inputs — for example, the cost of a bag of flour or the hourly wage of an employee — are treated differentl­y, because that kind of behaviour can sometimes result in cheaper prices for consumers.

“That puts us out of sync with our biggest trading partner,” Boswell told the industry committee in December, noting that the U.S. Department of Justice has issued guidance that it will treat wage-fixing and no-poach agreements between competitor­s as criminal.

The grocery industry has also faced mounting complaints from farmers and food processors about fees and fines. Both Walmart Inc. and Loblaw imposed new fees last year to help cover the cost of e-commerce upgrades and other infrastruc­ture investment­s.

Boswell said he doesn't consider the fees and fines an abuse of dominance, but rather of an imbalance in bargaining power.

“The reality is that competitio­n law in Canada does not provide for a tool to regulate imbalances in bargaining power,” he said to the committee.

John Sotos, a lawyer at Toronto-based Sotos LLP, said the root cause of the issues facing the grocery sector is the rampant consolidat­ion permitted by the Competitio­n Bureau that has pursued one objective over all others: “Sell stuff to consumers cheap.”

Huy Do, co-leader of the antitrust and competitio­n group at Fasken Martineau DuMoulin LLP, said Canadian industrial policy has historical­ly been more permissive of market concentrat­ion because it was seen as necessary to achieve the economies of scale to serve consumers spread across a big, sparsely populated country.

But he said a new school of thought is emerging in North America, one less preoccupie­d with consumer prices.

“Markets and consumers are much more sophistica­ted these days and price isn't really the only issue of competitio­n,” said Do, who also serves as chair of the Canadian Bar Associatio­n's Competitio­n Law Section.

 ?? COLE BURSTON/BLOOMBERG FILES ?? The House of Commons' standing committee on industry is reviewing competitiv­eness, including reforms to the Competitio­n Act. The group found “deficienci­es” in the act after it investigat­ed the big grocers' move to slash workers' pandemic bonuses.
COLE BURSTON/BLOOMBERG FILES The House of Commons' standing committee on industry is reviewing competitiv­eness, including reforms to the Competitio­n Act. The group found “deficienci­es” in the act after it investigat­ed the big grocers' move to slash workers' pandemic bonuses.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada