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Violation of Section 4 of Competition Act: CCP imposes Rs140m fine on PAMADA for cartelisation, price fixing

byCustoms Today Report
15/04/2015
in Business
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ISLAMABAD: After a thorough inquiry, the Competition Commission of Pakistan (CCP) has imposed Rs140 million fine on Pakistan Automobile Manufacturers Authorised Dealers Association (Pamada) for cartelisation and price fixing in the automobile sales and after sales markets.

A four-member bench, headed by CCP Chairperson Vadiyya Khalil and three members including Dr Shahzad Ansar, Mueen Batlay, and Ikram Ul Haque Qureshi, issued the order.

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The penalty was imposed on three relevant markets of body repairs and paint jobs, genuine automobile spare parts, and trained and experienced sales and technical staff.

The order passed by the CCP said that Pamada was guilty of collusive price-fixing in the markets for automobile body repair and paint jobs, and genuine automobile spare parts, as well as restricting competition in the market for trained and experienced technical and sales staff in the automobile sector.

All these charges were in violation of Section 4 of the Competition Act that prohibits decisions by associations which prevent, restrict or reduce competition. “It was found that Pamada had taken decisions to fix the rates for automobile body repairs and paint jobs, which were circulated by Pamada to all its members for implementation,” the CCP orders said.

After the initial inquiry the CCP observed, “It is not the fact of a price increase that poses a competitive concern, but rather the collective determination and fixation of prices and that commercial decision making by an association on behalf of its members remains prohibited.”

The CCP fined Pamada Rs100m for this violation. The CCP also found Pamada guilty of issuing a circular to a group of its members relating to one automobile manufacturer, prohibiting them from giving a discount on spare parts to consumers.

Prohibiting discounts falls within the umbrella of price fixing, and CCP fined Pamada Rs25m for this violation. The third charge is that Pamada imposed a policy on its members to seek no-objection-certificate (NOC) from previous employer before hiring an employee of a fellow automobile dealer.

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