New price fixing penalties proposed

The Treasurer has announced that the Australian Government will amend the Trade Practices Act 1974 to introduce criminal penalties for serious cartel conduct.

The proposed criminal cartel offence will prohibit a person from making or giving effect to a contract, arrangement or understanding between competitors that contains a provision to fix prices, restrict output, divide markets or rig bids, where the contract, arrangement or understanding is made or given effect to with the intention of dishonestly obtaining a gain from customers who fall victim to the cartel.

Serious cartel conduct results in the deception of customers when purchasing goods or services, unaware that the price and supply of those goods and services were determined by collusion, rather than competition.

To ensure the offence targets serious cartel conduct that causes large scale or significant economic harm, and that minor breaches are dealt with through civil rather than criminal proceedings, the DPP and the ACCC will enter into a formal, publicly available Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) establishing procedures for the investigation of the cartel offence and the circumstances in which the ACCC will refer a case to the DPP for prosecution. The MOU will also specify that in making an independent determination as to whether to prosecute a particular matter, the DPP will consider factors such as the impact of the cartel and the scale of detriment caused to consumers and the public, and previous admissions to or convictions for cartel conduct.

The ACCC will issue guidelines, prepared in consultation with the DPP, to outline the factors that will inform any decision to pursue a criminal investigation.

Appropriate protection for whistleblowers that come forward to uncover cartel conduct will be provided though a clear and certain immunity policy. Guidelines will be published setting out the conditions for immunity to be granted by the DPP, upon the advice of the ACCC. The respective roles and responsibilities of the ACCC and the DPP will also be defined in the MOU.

The maximum penalties for the offence will be a term of imprisonment of five years and a fine of $220,000 for individuals and a fine for corporations that is the greater of $10 million or three times the value of the benefit from the cartel, or where the value cannot be determined, 10 per cent of annual turnover.

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