Title: Sofia Competition Forum
1Sofia Competition Forum
- 1th SCF Annual Conference, November 2012, Sofia,
- Hilton Hotel,
- Capacity building needs of young competition
agencies in the Western Balkans - Hassan Qaqaya
- UNCTAD
- Hassan.qaqaya_at_unctad.org
- www.unctad.org/competition
2The West Balkan countries Needs and challenges
- Do all WB countries face the same challenges?
- Does capacity building and technical assistance
need to be calibrated to suit local
circumstances? - What should be the form of delivering capacity
building and TA? - How to assess the effectiveness of capacity
building ? Impact ? Sustainability? - Issues for discussion .
3Essential conditions for agency effectiveness
- An effective competition agency requires
certain essential conditions such as (a)
independence (b) adequate financial resources
(c) skilled staff to carry out complex
investigations of competition cases (d)
leadership (e) the ability to advocate
compliance with competition law among business
and government agencies to take competition
objectives into account and (f) effective
cooperation with sector regulators. - Most competition agencies in WB Countries have
10 to 15 years of existence, and continue to face
challenges in establishing strong foundations.
4Essential conditions for agency effectiveness../..
- In addition to these challenges, there are
conflicting objectives of the competition law
with other economic policies,.. in some
situations a lack of good governance,. a lack of
political will on the part of policymakers and
.a lack of a competition culture.
5capacity-building and technical Assistance to
overcome these challenges.
- In this regard, technical assistance and
capacity-building are of importance to overcome
these challenges in order to help the recipient
countries building up effective and efficient
competition agencies. For more than three
decades, UNCTAD and other international
organizations such as OECD, and ICN ,World Bank
and regional Banks, CUTS, and the more advanced
competition agencies have been striving to
improve the capacity of young competition
agencies around the world.
6capacity-building and technical Assistance to
overcome these challenges.../..
- An important and sometimes overlooked element of
technical assistance in competition policy is the
provision of written materials geared to young
competition agencies. Among UNCTADs
contributions in this field are the Model Law on
Competition, Handbook on competition legislation
with commentaries, Manual on the formulation and
enforcement of competition policy, Handbook on
investigative tools for competition cases, Peer
reviews and reports prepared for the IGE on
competition policy. See also OECD and ICN below,
7Review of existing capacity building activities
- Existing capacity-building activities on offer
includes - (a) Guidelines and descriptions of the roles,
functions, powers and responsibilities of
relevant national competition authorities from
those countries that have such legislation and
competition authorities - (b) Provision of legal assistance and policy
advice, supported by domestic experts who are
well-versed in their own national legal system
and political-administrative structure, with
respect to - Identification of the statutory structure and
substantive elements that should be included in
the legislation - Legal concepts relating to competition i.e.
anti-competitive practices, mergers, hard-core
cartels, abuse of dominance, consumer protection,
State monopolies, regulatory objectives, etc. - Â
8Review of existing capacity building
activities../..
- Administrative, criminal and civil actions and
penalties, including the allocation and extent of
criminal and civil responsibility and liability
for violations of the national competition
legislation, the applicable rules of procedure
and the appellate process, etc. and - (v) Procedures for information exchange and
cooperation with competition authorities of other
countries.
9Designing and assessing effective capcity
building
- Determining how best to design technical
assistance programmes to interact with nascent
and financially constrained competition agencies
is a difficult and complex task. This exercise
requires information and data that can be
difficult to collect to conduct this type of
exercise. Meanwhile, efforts have been undertaken
by actors in this field and academics to carry
out ex-post evaluations of programmes implemented
in the early 1990s. - Among these actors, UNCTAD,OECD, ICN,WB, the
United States Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and
the Department of Justice, EU DG Comp, academia
have attempted to conduct an assessment of
experiences in providing technical assistance to
young competition agencies around the globe.. - Â
10Designing and assessing effective capcity
building published research and findings
- UNCTAD (2011). Foundations of an effective
competition agency. TD/B/C.I/CLP/8. Geneva. - OECD (2009). Challenges faced by young
competition authorities. Note by the secretariat.
Global Forum on Competition, 19-20 February 2009. - United States Federal Trade Commission, A
Conference on Charting the Future Course of
International Technical Assistance, February 6,
2008, available at http//www.justice.gov/atr/pub
lic/reports/250908.pdf. - ICN (2007). Finding related to technical
assistance for newer competition agency, May. - Â World Bank, Tomas Serebrisky (2004). What we
know about competition agencies in emerging and
transition countries? World Bank Policy Research
Working paper 3221. - Kovacic WE (1997), Getting Started Creating New
Competition Policy Institution In Transition
Economies, 23 Brooklyn Journal Of international
Law 403 (1997). - Simon J. Evenett (2006). The effectiveness of
technical assistance, socio-- economic
development, and the absorptive capacity of
competition authorities. University of St.
Gallen and CEPR, 31 August.
11Designing and assessing effective capcity
building research and findings
- Daniel D. Sokol (2009). The future of
international antitrust and improving antitrust
agency capacity. Northwestern University Law
Review. Vol. 103, N2. - Nicholson MW, Sokol DD and Stiegert KW (2006).
Technical Assistance for Law and Economics An
Empirical Analysis in Antitrust/Competition
Policy. Legal studies research Paper Series,
Paper N 1024, University of Wisconsin Law
School, November 2006. - Sokol DD and Stiegert KW (2008). An Empirical
Evaluation of Long term Advisors and Short term
Interventions in Technical Assistance and
Capacity Building. The Global Competition Law
Centre Working Papers Series, College of Europe.
GCLC/02/08.
12Results of the research
- (a) A good technical assistance programme is one
that focuses both on what is being provided to
recipients as well as what can be learned from
them. Importantly, technical assistance from
agency providers can serve as a critical first
step to build an effective, long-term
relationship in which the provider and recipient
agencies cooperate on matters and issues of
common concern after the formal technical
assistance programme has ended - (b) Technical assistance is most effective when
there is long-term engagement between the
provider and recipient. At least 10 years are
needed in order for providers to adequately
acquire knowledge of local conditions, establish
credibility, and support the formation of strong
personal relationships - (c) The provision of technical assistance to more
mature agencies in WB and supporting institutions
should not be ignored. Agencies that have been in
existence for at least several years, but are
still not at a level comparable to provider
agencies, can benefit substantially from targeted
technical assistance
13Results of the research
- (d) Cooperation between donors, providers, and
recipients is beneficial, and more and more can
be done in this regards. Agency providers and
recipients should work together with
non-governmental advisors - (e) Planning and ongoing evaluation of the
effectiveness of technical assistance programmes
are essential. Donors, providers and recipients
should be actively engaged in this process.
14Results of the research
- In addition to the issues identified above, most
WB competition agencies have to overcome many
other challenges in order to create strong
foundations that would allow them to fulfill
their legal obligations effectively. Some of
these challenges are related to the functioning
of the competition agency. Others are inherent to
the environment within which the agency operates
for example - (i) the limited indigenous expertise on
competition law and policy, (ii)the lack of
competition culture,(iii) a deficient judicial
systems and (iv) a limited access to business
information.
15Results of the research
- UNCTAD annual surveys identified
- (a) Conflict with other policy objectives In
some countries, the governments are reluctant to
enforce competition law because they, rightly or
wrongly, believe that these actions unnecessarily
constrain the ability of the governments to
exercise their sovereign rights to achieve other
policy objectives. - (b) Resistance from vested interests Business
people are understandably reluctant to see
profitability eroded by increased competition.
Thus, it is not unusual for them to petition
government in order to maintain barriers to entry
and practices that facilitate collusion. - (d) Tension with sector-specific regulators
Despite massive changes in technology, several
segments of the infrastructure in developing
countries are natural monopolies, because of the
limited size of markets and the lack of
entrepreneurial zeal to make risky investments in
sectors with high gestation periods.
16Results of the research
- UNCTAD annual surveys identified
- (e) Resource and capacity constraints Resource
and capacity constraints are perhaps among the
most significant problems facing competition
authorities in developing economies. - (f) Lack of political will and independence A
common feature in most young competition
agencies( not the only ones) is the absence of
political ownership and support for competition
policy. This follows both from the power of
vested interests and from poor governance more
broadly. - The absence of political ownership translates to
political interference in the activities of the
competition agency, undermining its independence
as a professional watchdog of competition.
Several features of the environment in which
young competition agencies operate have been
identified. Many relate to the political
environment and to resistance to the possible
redistributive effects of effective competition
policy
17UNCTAD Capacity building and technical assistance
cycle
18Review of UNCTAD capacity building activities../..
- At the national level, UNCTAD provides assistance
related to - (a) Assistance in the preparation of competition
and consumer protection laws and related
legislation - (b) Consultative meeting to review of draft
competition laws with representatives of
governments. These activities represent an
essential step on the way of competition
legislation adoption - (c) Intensive courses on competition laws and
policies including training courses on
evidence-gathering in competition cases - (d) Training courses for judges on issues related
to competition laws and policies - (e) Training courses on the implementation of
competition law for newly appointed
commissioners and - (f) Studies and reports on a possible framework
for cooperation on competition policy, trade and
related issues for regional integration groupings
19Review of UNCTAD capacity building activities../..
- At the regional level, UNCTAD provides
assistance related to - In this regard, UNCTAD worked closely with many
regional organizations on issues - related to competition and consumer policies.
These groupings include ALADI, ASEAN, CARICOM,
CEMAC, COMESA, ECOWAS, SACU, SADEC , SELA and
WAEMU. - COMPAL is a programme on competition and consumer
protection policies for Latin America, supported
by the Swiss State Secretariat for Economic
Affairs (SECO). - AFRICOMP The new Competition Programme for
Africa (AFRICOMP) was officially launched in
Geneva on 22 June 2009. - Mediterranean Competition Forum project
- Tunis-UNCTAD competition centre
20Sofia Competition Forum a Cooperative Response
- Competition Authorities in the West Balkans have
common goals - Increased informal contacts between competition
authorities - Technical consultations competition authorities
learning from each other - No one country has all of the answers
- Each competition agency brings unique insight and
experience based on our own economic development
experiences - Competition agencies learn from each other
- Share a common goal competition for the benefit
of their fellow citizens and business as well as
regional integration.
21Issues for discussion
- (a) Are there types or timing of technical
assistance that are more effective in raising the
domestic political status of a competition
agency? - (b) The optimal duration for a technical
assistance project in competition law and policy
to be effective has been estimated at 10 years
based on the United Sates experience in
providing this type of assistance. Does the EU
and its member States and the OECD share the same
experience? - (c) Cooperation between donors, providers and
recipients is beneficial. What can be done to
make this cooperation winwin for each
stakeholder? How can coordination and synergy be
promoted in a context where there seems to be
competition among providers despite scarcity of
resources ?
22Issues for discussion
- (d) Given that the impact of technical assistance
on recipient authority - performance appears to vary systematically with
its absorptive capacity and socioeconomic
development, how can the absorptive capacity of
the recipient agency be improved? - (e) Planning and evaluation of the effectiveness
of technical assistance - programmes have been pointed out as essential to
enhance the enforcement capabilities of a young
competition agency. What should be evaluated,
that is, what are the indicators of success or
failure? When is evaluation most useful, either
for the recipient or the donor? Does EU DG Comp,
EU member States and OECD have experience of
changes made as a result of earlier evaluations?
23Concluding remarks
- Although there is an agreement about the
fundamental principles of an effective
Competition agency - No one country has all of the answers
- Each competition agency brings unique insight and
experience based on its own economic development
experiences - Competition agencies learn from each other hence
the need for cooperative intitiatives and
responses to local and regional needs - Capacity building should be calibrated to suit
the circumstances of the beneficiary agency