Publication
Australian competition regulation: What should we expect during 2024?
Australia | Publication | febbraio 2024
Content
Overview
The past 12 months have seen some significant developments in the Australian competition regulatory landscape. Further substantive developments are expected to occur during 2024.
In this commentary, we briefly summarise some of the key developments and trends over the last 12 months and provide some practical insights into five key developments expected in 2024 namely:
Rolling competition reforms
In August 2023, the Commonwealth Treasurer announced a new Competition Review and established a Taskforce within Treasury to assess whether Australian competition laws, policies and institutions remain fit-for-purpose. The Taskforce involves some 30 staff and is actively considering competition reforms focused on increasing productivity.
Several experienced ACCC employees were seconded into Treasury to participate in the Review, including Marcus Bezzi as Chief Advisor. The Taskforce is being supported by an Expert Advisory Panel comprising a number of commercial and government heavyweights, including Kerry Schott AO, John Asker, Sharon Henrick, David Gonski AC, John Fingleton CBE, Danielle Wood and former ACCC chair Rod Sims AO. The Panel is providing a sounding board for the Taskforce.
The genesis for the Taskforce is Australia’s declining productivity. Most advanced jurisdictions are undertaking similar policy reviews. The Taskforce objective is to enhance Australia’s competition policy and emulate some of the economic benefits achieved by the successful ‘Hilmer’ competition policy reforms from the 1990s. The government is mindful of recent OECD recommendations that suggested competitive tension has reduced in the Australian economy.
Interestingly, the Taskforce is adopting an evidence-intensive approach to law reform, although much of this empirical analysis is occurring in private within government. The Taskforce has been improving data sets and enhancing Treasury’s analytical capacity, then is testing whether proposals for law reform are consistent with the empirical evidence and would deliver meaningful net benefits to the Australian economy. While a number of competition reforms remain outstanding from recent reviews, the Taskforce is selectively focussing on a few key areas that are intended to deliver the greatest policy outcomes. While not yet formally publicly stated, these areas include merger law reform, aviation policy, digital transformation, and labour markets. However, the Taskforce expects that these areas of focus may evolve as the Review proceeds hence the Taskforce priorities are not enshrined.
The first area of focus by the Taskforce has been merger law reform. We comment on this below. We understand the Taskforce is providing important input into the Government’s aviation white paper that could well facilitate greater competition on Australian domestic aviation routes. The Taskforce is also considering labour market impediments in the context of the Australian Government’s 2023 Employment White Paper, including whether non‑compete are negatively impacting job mobility, innovation, and wages growth. As such, watch this space.
Higher penalties and tougher enforcement
ACCC chair Gina Cass-Gottlieb is approaching the end of the second year of her five-year tenure. While she received a recent question in Senate Estimates highlighting a reduced number of ACCC enforcement actions in 2023, the ACCC’s success cannot be measured numerically on enforcement decisions alone. The reality is far more nuanced. With its effective use of the full range of regulatory tools (from media releases up to court outcomes), in our view, the ACCC is delivering against its 2023-24 Compliance and Enforcement Priorities and is having a real market impact.
Gina Cass-Gottlieb is known as a formidable competition lawyer. Two years into her tenure, she is leaving her mark on the ACCC and Australia’s economic landscape. We have seen the ACCC apply greater regulatory scrutiny, adopt a more informed and fact-intensive approach to decision-making, and ultimately deliver strategically-beneficial results well beyond enforcement numbers alone.
The ACCC has demonstrated an increased appetite to test and interrogate evidence and potential harms, including by making more extensive use of its statutory information-gathering powers. Meanwhile, the ACCC continues to selectively pursue enforcement action and litigate when needed, but is also achieving significant ‘wins’ in settlements hence avoiding litigation costs. We expect this trend to continue.
For example:
- Record penalties in an upward trend: During 2023, the ACCC achieved a record penalty for cartel conduct ($57.5 million) and resale price maintenance ($15 million) both of which involved so-called per se (outright) contraventions. During 2023, potential penalties for competition and consumer law contraventions increased dramatically, some as much as five-fold. The trend in penalties is clearly upward. Please refer to our previous article ‘Higher penalties for anti-competitive conduct and expanded regulation of unfair contract terms’.
- Consumer protection can provide quick wins: The penalties for contraventions of consumer protection laws are now of a magnitude similar to breaches of competition laws. Consistent with its approach to date, the ACCC has continued to use consumer protection laws as a means to achieve faster and more cost-effective remedial outcomes. During 2023, a digital platform was fined $15 million in penalties and required to pay up to $15 million compensation to consumers.
- Shifting approach to merger assessment: The ACCC has been adopting a more rigorous approach to merger review, resulting in closer scrutiny of long-term effects and hence more nuanced and commercially astute decisions. This has manifested in both merger approvals and rejections. For example, the ACCC refused authorisation for a major telecommunications transaction with the ACCC’s decision subsequently upheld on appeal. Authorisation was also provided for a major energy merger based on an analysis of wider environmental benefits.
Greatest merger law reforms in 50 years
Proposals for Australian merger law reform are attracting significant media attention. Former ACCC chair Rod Sims AO commenced the debate in August 2021 to much scepticism, but some 30 months later, it now seems merger reform is inevitable.
Based on recent commentary, we think merger law reform is highly likely to occur during 2024 and hence is now a relevant consideration for transactional activity scheduled for late 2024. In essence:
- Australia is now highly likely to abandon the ‘voluntary pre-notification’ regime that has been in place since 1974 and instead adopt a mandatory pre-notification regime. This will mean that all acquisitions of assets and shares that trigger a statutory threshold will need to be notified to the ACCC. Mandatory notification of mergers currently occurs in most other jurisdictions, particularly Europe. The details of the statutory threshold are yet to be determined.
- A statutory pause period, or ‘suspension' will then apply that will block M&A completion while the ACCC undertakes its review. The suspension is likely to emulate the approach of Australia’s current foreign investment regime, colloquially known as the Foreign Investment Review Board (FIRB). We may find there becomes significant overlap between FIRB and ACCC notification processes.
- The ACCC will likely have greater practical discretion to block mergers, although what this may look like precisely is still the subject of heated debate. We doubt the substantive competition laws will change materially, but there may be some nuanced changes that work in the ACCC’s favour. However, there may also be significant procedural changes that affect the ACCC strategy in the context of ‘spoiling’ strategies and defending hostile takeovers, including greater scope for formal challenges/appeals and litigation.
We wrote a client alert on merger law reform in late November 2023 which is at the following URL: Fasten your seatbelts… merger law reform in Australia | Australia | Global law firm | Norton Rose Fulbright
However, this client alert is being overtaken by events – and merger reform is being expedited within government:
- We understand the Taskforce recommendations were presented to the Commonwealth Treasurer in early February 2024. An announcement by the Government as to its favoured option is imminent and may occur quickly.
- The politics of merger reform are aligned with the government’s focus on ‘cost of living’ pressures, so is receiving political priority. The ACCC is also characterising the need for reform as ‘urgent’. As such, our current take is that reforms will be enacted and perhaps also implemented during 2024.
- The detail remains unclear, as does the timing. A lot still needs to happen, including consultation on drafting (for example on notification thresholds) as well as a political passage through Parliament. However, our comment in November 2023 to ‘fasten your seatbelts’, remains apt.
Alleviating ‘cost of living’ pressures
Antitrust law is influenced by the economic and political context within which it exists. We are now half-way through the 2020s and this decade has raised complex and unprecedented issues. While COVID is now largely behind us, the macroeconomic and inflationary challenges caused by supply-chain disruptions persist. The resulting cost-of-living pressures for households around the world are playing into domestic politics and ultimately into regulation as governments seek to address political concerns.
While antitrust agencies are usually independent of government, they are not immune from political and social pressure to address prevailing socio-economic concerns. They may also play a direct role in developing and implementing government policy.
In Australia, we are now facing a ‘cost of living’ crisis. Households are facing significantly higher costs in the post-COVID inflationary environment. While inflation is starting to ease, the pressures on households remain.
Some of the recent policy and enforcement initiatives by the ACCC must be seen within this global and domestic political context:
- On 29 January 2024, the ACCC published its final report from its inquiry into childcare. The ACCC identified that market forces in childcare markets are not meeting the needs of all children and households. The ACCC has proposed targeted recommendations for different market types, depending on whether the market is adequately served, under-served or unserved. In addition the ACCC proposed a market stewardship program to monitor and shape the different childcare markets in Australia.
- Supermarkets are another key area of sectoral focus and it is entirely possible that similar conclusions may yet follow. On 1 February 2024, the Government directed the ACCC to conduct a year-long inquiry into the supermarket sector due to concerns around the competitiveness of retail prices and allegations of price gouging. This inquiry could become highly politicised and one indication of this is the Australian Council of Trade Unions has published its own report.
- Finally, energy markets are likely to remain a core focus for 2024 following a continuing increase in consumer energy bills during 2023. In December 2023, the ACCC released its latest Electricity Market Inquiry Report which identified continuing insufficient competition in electricity markets. This report sits within the context of continuing government concerns regarding security of electricity supply in the context of the current renewables transformation. Similarly, the ACCC released its report from its most recent gas inquiry which pointed to imminent gas shortfalls in the domestic market.
By any measure, we are therefore in for another interesting year with the global and domestic politics causing the ACCC to undertake detailed scrutiny of some economic sectors, irrespective whether underlying concerns result from anti-competitive behaviour.
Regulatory measures in digital markets
Regulation of the digital economy remains at the ‘frontier’ of antitrust regulation in the 2020s. During the 2000s, the Internet was largely unregulated, partly due to spectacular innovation and efficiency gains. During the 2010s, we saw growing concerns about the increased economic and political power of the largest technology mega-firms. Now in the 2020s, there has been policy recognition of imperfect competition in technology markets as well as concerns that reliance on generic competition law alone may be insufficient.
The EU has, so far, pioneered the development and implementation of ex ante sectoral regulation. The EU’s experiment with greater regulation is continuing in real time and Australia is watching with interest. A number of other jurisdictions are now also considering and implementing their own sectoral regimes, hence the EU approach has been cascading into the rest of the world, although each jurisdiction is (so far) adopting its own bespoke regulatory solution.
In Australia, we are seeing a swathe of current reforms impacting all areas of the digital economy. The government has been implementing an ambitious reform agenda that has resulted in intensive rolling regulatory reforms covering artificial intelligence, privacy and data, online safety, misinformation, cybersecurity, critical infrastructure, consumer protection and digital platforms regulation. The four key digital economy regulators have also formed the ‘Digital Platform Regulators Forum’ namely the ACCC, the Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA), the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC) and the eSafety Commissioner.
In Australia we have already seen the implementation of new and expanded economy-wide consumer measures, including an economy-wide prohibition against unfair trading practices and strengthening of the unfair contract terms laws, both of which are partly intended to address consumer concerns arising in digital markets.
Within this environment, the ACCC has been world-leading in conducting an extensive inquiry into digital platform services since 2020. The ACCC has been publishing interim reports every 6 months. In its fifth interim report of September 2023, the ACCC made a series of recommendations for sectoral regulatory reform.
In December 2023, the Government responded to the ACCC recommendations and indicated its ‘in principle’ support, although precise details were not provided. As such, we will see the development and likely implementation of a new regulatory regime for digital platform services in Australia in 2024. This is most likely to follow the EU and UK regulatory precedents, hence involve the targeted application of regulatory measures to certain digital services supplied by particular digital platforms that exceed specified regulatory thresholds. Once regulation is triggered, these digital platforms will become subject to more granular competition obligations that promote competition.
The global regulatory environment is still evolving and the Australian government will no doubt watch what happens in the EU and UK with significant interest. In Europe the Digital Platforms Act will become fully operational on 6 March 2024 with a myriad of new rules applying to designated gatekeepers. In the UK the Digital Markets, Competition and Consumer Bill is expected to receive royal assent in the UK parliament in April 2024 and the initial designation process will commence in October 2024. A key issue will be the appropriate level of granularity of regulation in the context of highly dynamic technology markets. Again, watch this space.
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