Legal experts involved in drawing up China's new anti-monopoly
draft law say a unified organization is needed to enforce what is
viewed as the nation's "economic constitution."
The draft governs the actions of all monopolies in China, both
domestic and foreign, and, as it stands, an anti-monopoly
commission will be established under the State Council.
But the responsibility for enforcement will be divided among the
Ministry of Commerce, the State Administration for Industry and
Commerce, and the National Development and Reform Commission.
But Wang Xiaoye, Sheng Jiemin and Shi Jianzhong, three legal
experts who participated in the legislation, all oppose enforcement
by the multi-department system.
"No country in the world appoints so many administrative
departments to enforce a law to protect market competition," Wang,
economic law director of the law institute under the Chinese
Academy of Social Sciences, told China Daily.
Without a unified and authoritative law enforcement
organization, she added, the anti-monopoly law will be difficult to
enforce, and "the issue is a key point in the legislation."
Shi, a professor at the China University of Political Science
and Law, said most countries have a unified anti-monopoly law
enforcement organization. One notable exception is the United
States, which authorizes the Department of Justice and Federal
Trade Commission to do the work.
He said he hoped that the anti-monopoly commission under the
State Council would handle the law's enforcement.
Sheng, director of the Institute of Economic Law at Peking
University, also pointed out that a multi-department law
enforcement system would not work.
On combating administrative monopolies such as the postal
service or the railways, Wang disagreed with the part of the draft
that authorizes higher authorities to correct governmental misuse
of power that hampers market competition.
If the draft is adopted without a change in that area, she said,
"it may mean the anti-monopoly law enforcement organization has no
right to curb administrative monopolies."
The answer, she said, is to empower the anti-monopoly law
enforcement organization to deal with administrative
monopolies.
The draft was submitted to the Standing Committee of the
National People's Congress (NPC) in June for the first read, and
the second read is not expected until the first half of next
year.
Other experts praised the draft for addressing both domestic and
foreign monopolies.
Huang Yong, a professor at the University of International
Business and Economics who also participated in the legislation,
said that the law does not target only foreign monopolies.
"Maintaining order in competition that does not discriminate
against foreign companies accords with China's interests," he
said.
Complaints against monopolies of multinationals include areas
such as laptop computers, beverages, and supermarkets.
(China Daily November 15, 2006)