Understanding and addressing the misuse of market power is essential for maintaining a competitive business environment. By staying informed, businesses can protect themselves and ensure everyone benefits from a more competitive market. We recently sat down with Ellen Thomson, Principal Advisor at the Commerce Commission, to discuss how the misuse of market power can impact small and medium-sized businesses in Canterbury.
Competitive markets encourage businesses to innovate to offer consumers greater choice and better prices or quality. That’s why we have laws to protect competition in New Zealand. When a business holds substantial market power, it may be able to damage the competitive process if it can significantly restrict or hinder the ability of its rivals to compete. We call this the misuse of market power. If your business is struggling to compete because of the actions of a powerful business, those actions could be illegal.
We use the term ‘substantial market power’ to describe a business that is very powerful in any given market. We consider a business to have substantial market power if it can increase prices or reduce the quality of its products and services without losing too many customers to competitors.
The misuse of market power might be designed to create significant barriers for smaller businesses wanting to enter new markets, expand operations and achieve growth. For consumers, it can lead to higher prices, reduced choices, and stifled innovation.
There are several things to watch out for:
If these actions are making it difficult for you to compete, they might be illegal.
Yes. It’s not illegal to have market power or to compete strongly by offering low prices or better services. The key is not to engage in behaviour that substantially harms competition.
Harm to competition must be substantial to be illegal.
It might not be substantial if the behaviour is short-term, only affects a small number of competitors, or is frustrating but doesn't impact your overall ability to compete.
We have resources to help small and medium-sized businesses identify illegal conduct on our website here. We’ve included examples and animations to help businesses understand different types of conduct.
We receive quite a few complaints that demonstrate businesses don’t necessarily understand the law. It’s really important for SMEs to recognise the actions that could be considered illegal and to tell us if they think they’ve been affected by the misuse of market power.
Gather as much evidence as you can and report your concerns to the Commerce Commission here.
The Commerce Commission can investigate potential breaches of the law. If we think the law’s been breached, we can take parties to court.
We receive thousands of enquiries every year, and while we assess everything that we receive, we can’t investigate everything.
In determining what to prioritise, we consider our published Enforcement Criteria.
Businesses can learn more about cartels and other types of anti-competitive behaviour on our website here.