Bohol Tribune
Opinion

Rule of Law

Atty. Gregorio B. Austral, CPA

Abuse of Dominant Position

When market leaders know that they are big and customers have no other choice but to turn to their products or services regardless of quality, they tend to put aside innovation and continuous improvement in favor of huge profits they can juice out from their customers.

With the passage of the Philippine Competition Act (R.A. No. 10667), companies which dominate certain industries in our country must now carefully guard their actions since any abuse of their dominant position is now prohibited and punished under the Philippine anti-trust law.

Dominant position refers to a position of economic strength that an entity or entities hold which makes it capable of controlling the relevant market independently from any or a combination of the following: competitors, customers, suppliers, or consumers [Sec. 4(g)].  Relevant market refers to the market in which a particular good or service is sold and which is a combination of the relevant product market and the relevant geographic market. A relevant product market comprises all those goods and/or services which are regarded as interchangeable or substitutable by the consumer or the customer, by reason of the goods and/or services’ characteristics, their prices and their intended use while the relevant geographic market comprises the area in which the entity concerned is involved in the supply and demand of goods and services, in which the conditions of competition are sufficiently homogenous and which can be distinguished from neighboring areas because the conditions of competition are different in those areas [Sec. 4 (k)].

The law does not give an exact definition as to what constitutes an abuse of dominant position, however, it enumerates certain actions which are deemed abuse of dominant position.  A company which enjoys a dominant position in the market cannot sell goods or services below cost with the object of driving competition out of relevant market [Sec. 15 (a)].  However, the company may raise as a defense that the price established was in good faith to meet or compete

with the lower price of a competitor in the same market selling the same or comparable product or service of like quality.

Also prohibited is the act of imposing barriers to entry or committing acts that prevent competitors from growing within the market in an anti-competitive manner except those that develop in the market as a result of or arising from a superior product or process, business acumen, or legal rights or laws [Sec. 15 (b)].  

The practice of some companies in making a transaction subject to acceptance by the other parties of other obligations which, by their nature or according to commercial usage, have no connection with the transaction is now prohibited [Sec. 15 (c)].  Practices of banks in requiring their borrowers to transfer all the borrowers’ deposits to the bank as a condition for the grant of loan or of some food and beverage companies prohibiting stores or dealers from selling the products of a competitor in exchange for a free use of freezer or other equipment may now be put under a close scrutiny for any possible violation of the law.

Imposing restrictions on the lease or contract for sale or trade of goods or services concerning where, to whom, or in what forms goods or services may be sold or traded, such as fixing prices, giving preferential discounts or rebate upon such price, or imposing conditions not to deal with competing entities, where the object or effect of the restrictions is to prevent, restrict or lessen competition substantially is likewise prohibited [Sec. 15 (e)].  Also proscribed is the practice of making supply of particular goods or services dependent upon the purchase of other goods or services from the supplier which have no direct connection with the main goods or services to be supplied [Sec. 15 (f)].

There are several company practices in the Philippines which are anti-competitive.  More often, these are imbedded in certain provisions in the contract which we commonly enter into such as contract of lease, supply agreement, franchise agreement and business contracts. These provisions engineered by companies enjoying dominant position are designed to perpetuate their dominance in the market.  We hope that the Philippine Competition Act will successfully level the playing field in a market where David and Goliath have continued to play.

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