Office of Fair Trading - A Quick Guide To Competition and Consumer Protection Laws
Office of Fair Trading - A Quick Guide To Competition and Consumer Protection Laws
Office of Fair Trading - A Quick Guide To Competition and Consumer Protection Laws
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A quick guide to competition and consumer protection laws that affect your business
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A quick guide to competition and consumer protection laws that affect your business
Anti-competitive agreements
The Competition Act 1998 (the Act) prohibits anti-competitive
agreements between businesses. In particular, you must not:
agree to fix prices or terms of trade, for example agreeing
price rises with your competitors
agree to limit your production to reduce competition
carve up markets or customers, for example agreeing with
a competitor that you will bid for one contract and they will
take another
discriminate between customers, for example charging
different prices or imposing different terms where there is
no difference in the circumstances of supply.
Any agreement that prevents, restricts or distorts competition
is covered (not just the types of agreement listed above). An
agreement could be formal (such as legally-binding contracts)
or informal (such as unwritten gentlemens agreements). The
Act mainly applies to agreements between businesses with
a significant combined market share. But even the smallest
businesses need to avoid getting involved in anti-competitive
agreements, such as cartels. The OFT can also assess whether
an agreement may affect trade between EU member states.
Abuse of a dominant market position
The Act also prohibits abuse of a dominant market position.
This mainly applies to businesses that have a large market
share, usually 40 per cent or more.
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Other factors taken into consideration in determining whether
a company is dominant include the number and size of
competitors and customers and whether new businesses can
easily set up in competition.
The type of practices that could indicate abuse include
charging unfair prices or imposing other unfair trading
conditions on customers, limiting production, or refusing to
supply an existing customer without an objective reason.
The OFT can also assess whether an abuse may affect trade
between EU Member States.
Penalties
The OFT has extensive powers to investigate suspected
breaches of competition law and take action. Penalties can
include fines of up to 10 per cent of a companys annual
worldwide turnover. Also, directors can be disqualified, given
an unlimited fine or even imprisoned.
In addition to any penalty imposed, customers and
competitors may be able to privately sue companies that
break the law for any losses they have suffered due to the
anti-competitive actions.
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A quick guide to competition and consumer protection laws that affect your business
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Cartels
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A quick guide to competition and consumer protection laws that affect your business
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Mergers
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A quick guide to competition and consumer protection laws that affect your business
Market studies
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A quick guide to competition and consumer protection laws that affect your business
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Providing or arranging consumer credit without being
licensed is a criminal offence and can result in a fine and/or
imprisonment. Also, businesses may not, legally, be able to
enforce a credit agreement if they are not licensed.
Advertising credit
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A quick guide to competition and consumer protection laws that affect your business
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A quick guide to competition and consumer protection laws that affect your business
The BPRs replace the requirements set out under the previous
Control of Misleading Advertising Regulations 1998 (CMARs)
not to use advertisements which mislead other businesses
or which are not permitted by comparative advertisements.
Therefore, if your business was compliant with CMARs, it is
likely to be compliant with the BPRs.
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In general terms an advertisement can be considered
misleading if it, in any way, deceives, or is likely to deceive,
the trader to whom it is addressed or reaches and if, by
reason of its deceptive nature, it is likely to affect their
economic behaviour. If the advertisement misleads consumers
and causes, or is likely to cause, them to take a different
transactional decision than they may otherwise have taken,
this may breach the Consumer Protection from Unfair Trading
Regulations 2008 (CPRs).
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A quick guide to competition and consumer protection laws that affect your business
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The CPRs consist of:
a general duty not to trade unfairly by acting contrary to the
requirements of professional diligence so as to distort the
average consumers decisions in relation to the product or
service. This can be broadly understood as failing to act in
accordance with acceptable trading practice a reasonable
person would expect
prohibitions of misleading and aggressive practices.
Examples include withholding material information from
consumers so as to impair their ability to make an informed
choice, or coercing a consumer into making a decision
31 specific listed practices that are considered to be unfair
in all circumstances and are therefore, banned. Examples
include falsely stating that a product will only be available
for a very limited time and therefore depriving consumers
of sufficient opportunity or time to make an informed
choice. Other banned practices include, various prohibitions
dealing with abuse of approval schemes, refusing to leave
a consumers home when asked to do so, and operating or
promoting a pyramid scheme.
Further information on the CPRs is available from:
www.oft.gov.uk
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A quick guide to competition and consumer protection laws that affect your business
Issuing contracts
You have a legal duty not to use unfair terms in the contracts
you have with consumers.
Most standard terms are covered by the unfair contract terms
legislation. In practice this means:
certain terms are excluded - for example, core terms
which set the price or define the product or service are
exempt provided they are in plain language
terms do not have to be in writing
types of term that may be found unfair include disclaimers
which seek to limit liability for: death or injury, delays, faulty
or misdescribed goods, and unsatisfactory services
other common unfair terms include: those that deny the
consumer full redress, impose unfair penalties, loss of
prepayments, and allow businesses to vary the terms after
the contract has been agreed.
Consumers can complain about unfair contract terms to their
Local Authority Trading Standards Services, the OFT, the
utility, rail and communication regulators, the Information
Commissioner, Which? and the Financial Services Authority.
The OFT and other enforcers have powers to stop businesses
using unfair terms or recommending the use of such terms in
contracts with consumers.
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A quick guide to competition and consumer protection laws that affect your business
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A quick guide to competition and consumer protection laws that affect your business
Estate agency
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You must also tell clients promptly and in writing:
of all offers made on their property (unless they inform you
in writing that they are not interested in receiving offers of a
certain type)
if you or someone connected to you, has a personal interest
in a property you are marketing, you also have to declare
this promptly and in writing to potential buyers.
You must not discriminate against a potential buyer who does
not want to take up other services you provide (for example,
the potential buyer may not wish to obtain a mortgage or
some other form of financial product from you). Nor must
you misrepresent the details or existence of any offer or the
existence or status of any potential purchaser (for example,
you should not advise your client that a prospective purchaser
is a cash buyer if they need to arrange a mortgage).
Other services
If you or someone connected to you has offered other
services to potential purchasers who have had offers
accepted, you must tell your clients promptly and in writing
about these services.
Redress schemes
With effect from 1 October 2008 persons engaging in estate
agency work in relation to residential property are required
to join an approved estate agents redress scheme. Details of
scheme that are currently approved are available on the OFT
website: www.oft.gov.uk/ears
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A quick guide to competition and consumer protection laws that affect your business
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Who to contact at the OFT
General enquiries
If you have a general question about the work of the OFT
or any of the regulations we enforce, please contact us as
follows:
Telephone: 08457 224499
Email: enquiries@oft.gsi.gov.uk
Write: Enquiries, Office of Fair Trading, Fleetbank House,
2-6 Salisbury Square, London EC4Y 8JX
Cartels
If you suspect one of your competitors, suppliers or
customers is part of a cartel, contact our cartel hotline.
Telephone: 0800 085 1664
Email: cartelshotline@oft.gsi.gov.uk
To admit to being part of a cartel and apply for leniency,
telephone 020 7211 8117.
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A quick guide to competition and consumer protection laws that affect your business
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Call 0800 389 3158 for more free
copies of this publication.
Published by the Office of Fair Trading
Printed in the UK on at least 50% recycled paper
Product code OFT911
Edition 10/08
Crown copyright 2007