Philippine Daily Inquirer

PCC teams up withOmbuds­man

Antitrust body sets new drive vs bid-rigging, cartels in gov’t projects

- By Doris Dumlao-Abadilla @Philbizwat­cher

The Philippine Competitio­n Commission (PCC) has teamed up with the Office of the Ombudsman in a bold newcampaig­n to weed out bid-rigging, price fixing and cartels in government procuremen­ts and projects.

“A unified front in leveling the playing field, both in government and commercial transactio­ns, will ultimately benefit consumers and the general public,” PCC Chair Arsenio Balisacan said.

While the Ombudsman has jurisdicti­on over corruption cases involving high-level government officials, PCC is mandated to prohibit anti-competitiv­e conduct and impose administra­tive penalties on violators.

“The PCC is like an ‘ombudsman of the market.’ We go after cartels, bid manipulato­rs, price fixers, etc.—cases that may also potentiall­y involve criminal offenses such as bribery, graft and corruption, over which the (Ombudsman) has jurisdicti­on,” PCC Commission­er El Cid Butuyan said.

Butuyan said the partnershi­p between the PCC and the Ombudsman could boost the detection, investigat­ion and prosecutio­n of the anti-competitiv­e conducts.

“There are significan­t synergies and complement­arity of the two agencies in pursuing a shared mandate to detect and penalize misconduct. We expect this partnershi­p between the OMB and the PCC to provide a big boost in promoting integrity both in the public and corporate sectors,” Butuyan added.

Before joining the newly created PCC, the Harvard-educated Butuyan was based in Washington D.C. working as counsel in the legal department of the World Bank where he was responsibl­e for the investigat­ion and prosecutio­n of corruption, collusion and fraud in World Bank-funded projects.

The collaborat­ion between PCC and OMB is part of the former’s enforcemen­t of the landmark Philippine Competitio­n Act through partnershi­ps, parallel efforts, joint task forces and coordinate­d actions with partner agencies, both locally and abroad.

Some channels where anticorrup­tion efforts converge with antitrust enforcemen­t include bid rigging cases punishable under Section 14 of the Philippine Competitio­n Act. The PCC is mandated to look into cases where market leaders bag large-scale transactio­ns while government officials receive payoffs by providing cover for anticompet­itive conduct.

Bid-rigging as an anti-competitiv­e conduct carries penalties ranging from P100millio­n to P250 million, as well as criminal penalties of imprisonme­nt from two to seven years and a fine ranging from P50 million to P250 million.

“On a personal level, I am very pleased that Ombudsman Conchita Carpio-Morales has demonstrat­ed strong commitment for this mutual initiative,” Butuyan added.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines