Luke Wainscoat and Caitlin Davies have an article in the most recent issue of the Competition and Consumer Law Journal (volume 25, part 2) looking at how the new concerted practices prohibition should be applied, and how it is likely to be applied, based on overseas experience.
The new law has two limbs – it prohibits:
A concerted practice is likely to include a wide range of conduct if the ACCC’s guidelines and overseas experience is any guide (although Australian courts may not go along with this). This includes every communication of private and competitively sensitive information between firms, including one-off conversations.
This would leave the SLC test to do a lot of work, and there has been little, if any, debate about how that test should be applied to concerted practices in Australia.
Luke and Caitlin argue that examining whether some conduct is likely to have an SLC purpose or effect requires more than a checklist of factors to mechanically assess the state of competition in a market with and without the conduct. What is needed to avoid overreach is a principled approach, based on sound economic theory, supported by facts, to demonstrate how conduct will negatively impact competition.
In particular, Luke and Caitlin suggest that the SLC test be applied as follows:
1) Assess the degree of competition in the factual, i.e. with the information sharing. This should include a coherent theory of harm – that is, an explanation of how the information sharing would cause competition to be substantially lessened relative to the counterfactual. The assessment should be:
2) Assess the degree of competition in the counterfactual, i.e. without the information sharing, consistent with the theory of harm.
3) Assess the difference between the degree of competition in the factual and counterfactual
In the case of concerted practices, the theory of harm will almost always be that there will be an increased risk of collusion, in which case there will only be an SLC if collusion is made more likely by the conduct. Determining that question in any given case will require an examination of whether the market structure, conduct of firms and market outcomes are consistent with collusion or competition.
This is similar to the approach in the United States which uses ‘plus factors’ to determine whether conduct is consistent with self-interested unilateral behaviour, or with collusion. In other words, they can be thought as of evidence that the collusive theory of harm is more likely than an alternative theory that firms were competing unilaterally. We expect that cases in Australia could make use of similar types of evidence as that used in the United States, such as:
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