Business Day

Did tribunal tilt the scales?

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The law applies even in a pandemic, and authoritie­s can’t use the coronaviru­s outbreak, no matter how frightenin­g, to circumvent it. Except many competitio­n lawyers feel this is just what the Competitio­n Tribunal has done.

The tribunal, which acts as a court in antitrust matters, this week found Babelegi, a small family-run Pretoria company, guilty of charging excessive prices after it sold 76 boxes of dust masks at an average 500% mark-up in February.

The first chair of the tribunal, David Lewis, has previously noted that excessive pricing in competitio­n law “is fraught with complexity and controvers­y”.

Excessive pricing is a difficult case to prove for many reasons. For one, the law was set up so it wouldn’t be easy for the state to interfere with markets and rule on the prices of goods at a whim.

The tribunal appears to have made proving such an excessive price case remarkably easy, by using the coronaviru­s pandemic to reinterpre­t the strict law on what constitute­s an excessive price. This has raised questions about whether authoritie­s are using the pandemic to circumvent the requiremen­t to behave lawfully.

The Competitio­n Act states only a dominant company with market power can be guilty of excessive pricing.

It helps to have context about SA’s two main cases of excessive pricing in the past 20 years to explain the rather technical issue. Both cases were against huge companies: Sasol and the firm now known as ArcelorMit­tal, which were monopolies thanks to apartheid-era support given by the state when the energy and steel giants were establishe­d.

Both cases went all the way to the Competitio­n Appeal Court, which overturned the guilty verdicts. Put another way, not a single case of excessive pricing in SA’s democracy has been upheld by the Competitio­n Appeal Court.

So back to the case at hand. First, the commission, which brings a case before the tribunal, had to prove this family-run company was a dominant player with market power to set excessive prices unconstrai­ned by competitio­n.

So is Babelegi, a “firm you have never heard of in your life”, as described by its advocate, really a dominant market player in the mask business? According to the tribunal, yes it is. It accepted the commission’s argument that because Babelegi sold masks at high prices, it was therefore dominant. This, say lawyers, is problemati­c. The law has many tests to prove a company is dominant, including considerin­g competitor­s’ prices at home and in other markets, the length of time this happened and barriers to entry. But the commission didn’t examine these issues.

It used a circular argument — it said the charge of excessive pricing proved the dominance. The fact that Babelegi charged what it did means it had temporary market power.

The commission also argued that the law and Babelegi’s high prices should be seen through the prism of extraordin­ary circumstan­ces of the pandemic. And the tribunal agreed with it on this point too. But Babelegi sold these masks in February, before SA had been gripped by the pandemic and imposed its national lockdown, which came towards the end of March.

Is it fair to apply the circumstan­ces of the coronaviru­s pandemic to a company’s behaviour in February, when SA did not have a single case and mask wearing was not widespread? Lawyers who are not involved in this case have described this finding as unfair.

The guilty finding does mean Dis-Chem, which made the same argument as Babelegi and argued that a dominance case had not been proved against it, is likely to lose its case.

It also means the coronaviru­s pandemic has made what has been an impossible case to prove in 20 years much easier for the competitio­n authoritie­s to win. But the law must not be diluted even in the face of a health tragedy.

BABELEGI SOLD THESE MASKS IN FEBRUARY, BEFORE SA HAD BEEN GRIPPED BY THE PANDEMIC

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