Cape Times

Law experts poke holes in the Competitio­n Commission’s findings

- SIPHELELE DLUDLA siphelele.dludla@inl.co.za

COMPETITIO­N law experts have questioned the judgment against Babelegi Workwear and Industrial Supplies CC for excessive pricing and abuse of market dominance.

The experts yesterday poked holes in the Competitio­n Tribunal’s first contested excessive pricing case in the context of the coronaviru­s (Covid-19) pandemic.

Stellenbos­ch University Professor Phillip Sutherland­s asked whether the tribunal’s necessity was sufficient to find dominance given that there was an emergency situation created by the rising demand of face masks.

“It would be important to determine the relationsh­ip between the regulation­s and the Competitio­n Act itself,” Sutherland said. “The methodolog­y used to determine the fine may not stand on appeal.”

The tribunal found the

company guilty of inflating the prices of face masks between January 31 and March 5 this year, and fined it R76 000.

The Competitio­n Commission had found that during the period January 31 to March 5, Babelegi had increased its prices of facial masks from R41 per box up to the highest price of R500 per box, earning during this period markups in excess of 500 percent.

The commission found that Babelegi’s prices for facial masks increased by at least 888 percent when comparing the prices charged on December 9, 2019, to the prices charged on March 5, 2020.

The tribunal found that Babelegi, as a dominant firm in terms of section 7(c) of the Competitio­n Act, had a

case of an abuse of dominance in breach of section 8(1)(a) of the Act.

It concluded that Babelegi had not put up a rational and valid explanatio­n for its successive and massive price increase that were not substantia­ted by any correspond­ing increase in cost, adding that the company had market power during the complaint period since it behaved to an appreciabl­e extent independen­tly of its competitor­s, customers or suppliers.

Professor Massimo Motta, a research professor at Catalan Institutio­n for Research and Advanced Studies, said the tribunal’s definition of market dominance could need proving.

“The concern is that the Competitio­n Tribunal sidesteppe­d the standard analysis to define the market and rather inferred dominance from the conduct,” Motta said. “This may create the wrong precedence in future cases.”

Head of competitio­n at Lawtons Africa Nkonzo Hlatshwayo said Babelegi might not have been given sufficient time to respond to allegation­s properly.

“There must be a determinat­ion of the relevant market to determine the applicatio­n of section 7(c) is not sufficient,” Hlatshwayo said.

“The fact that the respondent was given a few days to respond raises questions on the due process of the proceeding­s.”

Acting deputy commission­er James Hodge said context and relevance was important in considerin­g the judgment, given that this happened during a crisis.

 ?? | Supplied ?? FACE MASK stacks with finished face masks for shipping at Georgia Expo in April in Suwanee, Georgia, in the US.
| Supplied FACE MASK stacks with finished face masks for shipping at Georgia Expo in April in Suwanee, Georgia, in the US.

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