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Global | Publication | March 2017
Norton Rose Fulbright partner Thierry Dorval recently moderated a panel hosted by the Institute of Corporate Directors that featured Canada’s Commissioner of Competition of Canada, John Pecman.
The following summarizes the related discussions and focuses on guidelines provided by the commissioner during this seminar.
According to the commissioner, legal compliance is a shared responsibility and the Competition Bureau expects businesses and their directors will each play their role.
To help businesses play their part, the commissioner encourages implementing a competition law compliance program. The bureau’s website includes a corporate compliance portal that offers a variety of tools to help businesses of all sizes establish effective compliance programs within their organizations.
An effective compliance program can prevent anticompetitive behaviour in the first place. To this end, the bureau has identified seven elements that should go into every compliance program. However, the extent to which businesses implement each of these will vary depending on each business’ activities and its “risk profile”:
Management Buy-in and Support. Managers need to actively and continuously support the company’s compliance program, and should appoint someone in the company with a direct line to top managers and the power to run that program—the “compliance officer.”
Assessing Compliance Risks. What business activities is your company engaged in that could put it at risk of violating the law or becoming a victim? Figuring out the answer to this question is called “risk assessment,” and compliance programs need to focus on those.
Policies and Procedures. Your company’s policies and procedures should reflect its risk profile, in that they should address how to avoid breaking the law when engaging in business activities with compliance risks—in effect, acting as your company’s “compliance roadmap.”
Training. Anyone in the company who deals with any risk areas needs to understand how to comply with the law.
Monitoring, Verification and Reporting. It is not enough to simply tell managers and staff what to do; just like in other aspects of your business, you need to ensure they are doing it. Also, the ability of managers and staff to ask questions and confidentially report concerns to your company’s compliance officer without fear of reprisals is a sign of a credible program.
Discipline and Incentives. A compliance program needs to set out, in advance of any violation of the law or breach of the program, procedures and potential disciplinary actions for those who break the rules (or make others break the rules) or incentives to help ensure employees follow the program.
Is it Working? It’s good practice to evaluate the program regularly to be sure it works and is credible and effective. Evaluations can also be triggered by an event—for example, if a violation has occurred, or you acquire another company, or move into new lines of business or new markets.
Legal framework
Cost of non-compliance
An investigation by the bureau may be costly:
If, however, a business begins with a corporate compliance program, it stands a very good chance of avoiding all these potentially significant costs that far outweigh those associated with implementing a program.
Management Commitment and Support
According to the commissioner, management commitment and support with respect to competition law are paramount:
According to the commissioner, directors should remember three things with respect to competition law:
Many directors will likely never have to deal with the Competition Bureau. One of the ways of reducing the likelihood of crossing paths with the bureau is to ensure your organization has a culture of compliance, which includes a credible and effective compliance program.
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