Trudi Makhaya 1 The role of competition law in economic transformation Apartheid legacy Limited market competition and economic concentration Extensive government intervention Exclusion of the majority from participation in the economy ID: 798558
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Competition policy in healthcare (market)
Trudi Makhaya
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Slide2The role of competition law in economic transformation
Apartheid
legacy:
Limited market competition and economic concentration
Extensive government interventionExclusion of the majority from participation in the economyInstitutions to encourage competition – competition law, competition authorities – seen as ‘doorstep institutions’ that help society move towards an ‘open access’ orderLiberalisation and competitive markets seen as part of solution in SA
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Slide3Purpose of the Competition Act
The purpose of this Act is to promote and maintain competition in the Republic in order-
to promote the efficiency, adaptability and development of the economy;
to provide consumers with competitive prices and product choices;
to promote employment and advance the social and economic welfare of South Africans;to expand opportunities for South African participation in world markets and to recognise the role of foreign competition in the Republic;to ensure that small and medium-sized enterprises have an equitable opportunity to participate in the economy; andto promote a greater spread of ownership, in particular to increase the ownership stakes of historically disadvantaged persons.3
Slide4The South African competition regime
Institutions
and legislation
Competition Act of 1998
Commission, Tribunal, Competition Appeal CourtSuccess in blocking anti-competitive mergers and busting cartelsFew abuse of dominance cases with findings of anti-competitive behavior – 8 findings, 3 companies paid fines (SAA, Foskor, Telkom, Sasol under appeal)
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Slide5Public interest considerations
Mergers subject to a public interest test outlined in the Act
Employment
Impact on industrial sector or region
Ability of firms owned by historically disadvantaged to competeAbility of national industries to compete in international marketsExemptions from the ActAbility of small business and those owned by HDIs to competeCrafting remedies that deal with economic transformation (small business development funds – Pioneer, Walmart, AFGRI)Nationwide Poles – attempt to include public interest considerations in enforcement cases (overturned)Ways to interpret the act – narrow, expansive, opportunistic
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Slide6Competition authorities in healthcare
HASA/SAMA/BHF consent orders that led to the cessation of collective bargaining between healthcare providers and healthcare funders, to be replaced by bilateral pricing discussion
Various mergers in private healthcare
Netcare
/CHG Life/JMHPhodiclinics/Protector group of hospitalsExemption application from the HPCSA for its rules that may violate competition lawComplaints about designated service provider networks/ selective contracting by healthcare administrators – CC has not referred these to Tribunal
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Slide7Market Inquiry
Scope
Examine factors that distort, prevent or restrict competition in a market – general state of competition – not conduct of a particular named firm
Independent Panel
UK experienceExtensive submissionsEvidence-based analysis of theories of harmChallenges from market participants on process (access to data) and remedies7
Slide8Theories of harm
Market inquiries proceed from assumption that a ‘market’ can be identified, defined and analysed; and that the deficiencies to be examined relate to the workings of ‘competition’ within that market.
‘Theories of harm’ – hypotheses about harm to competition
Harm will express itself through:
negative impact on consumer welfare through prices, choice, quality and innovationnegative impact on the public interest elements outlined in the act, namely diversity of ownership, ability of small businesses to compete and employment.Panel identifies theories of harm related to the market power of funders, facilities and practitioners; barriers to entry; imperfect information and the regulatory framework. 8
Slide9Public interest & constitutional context
ToR
recognises that private healthcare provision takes place within the context of a constitutional commitment to the universal provision of healthcare (para 13)
Ability of the state to provide adequate healthcare might be hampered by costs of private healthcare provision that are not fully borne by that sector (externalities)
Recommendations have to be directly related to remedying the identified deficiencies in competition. However, Panel could also be mindful that Recommendations are supportive of the state’s ability to meet Constitutional obligations9