
CCP warns of Rs75m fine on illegal agreements
The CCP has observed that certain agreements between undertakings and their wholesalers, dealers, agents and retailers may constitute a refusal to deal with non-dealers and often include restrictive provisions that could violate Section 4(2) of the Competition Act 2010, according to a press release issued by the CCP on Saturday.
These potentially anti-competitive clauses may include resale price maintenance, market division, non-competition obligations or other conditions that restrict competition. Such vertical agreements — those between parties operating at different levels of supply chain – are void ab initio as they prevent, restrict or distort competition, unless specifically exempted by the CCP under Section 5 read with Section 9 of the Act, it said.
Exemption applications submitted to the CCP are evaluated using the criteria in Section 9 of the Act. Agreements that promote production or distribution, encourage technical or economic progress or result in efficiency gains that outweigh any adverse impact on competition may be granted exemption, the CCP announced.
The commission has strongly advised all undertakings to apply for exemption under Section 5 before entering into any such agreements to avoid potential sanctions.
Under the Competition Act 2010, the CCP is empowered to ensure free competition across all sectors of the economy, aiming to enhance economic efficiency and protect consumers from anti-competitive practices such as abuse of dominance, cartelisation, deceptive marketing and mergers that may reduce market competition.

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