The CMA’s New Prioritisation Guidelines: Towards Inclusive and Sustainable Growth?
On 30 October 2023, the British Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) published its new prioritisation principles
Seemingly little has changed in the text since the previous version of these principles was published almost ten years ago. However, a careful comparison shows significant changes in language that may point to fundamental shifts in the direction of competition policy in the UK towards a more sustainable and inclusive selection of enforcement targets.
In this blog post, we briefly introduce the concept of priority setting by competition authorities and take a look back at the development of Prioritization principles by the UK’s competition watchdog. We argue that while changes seem incremental, their impact could be significant if implemented carefully.
The history of the OFT’s and CMA’s Prioritisation Principles
Setting priorities by competition authorities is a fundamental component of effective, expert-driven enforcement, which is independent of politics. As competition authorities are constrained by scarce financial and human resources, it is neither possible nor desirable, that they enforce every possible law infringement
The UK was one of the first competition authorities to publish prioritisation principles in Europe, detailing a positively formulated and dedicated programme for setting its priorities. The Office of Fair Trading (OFT) first published a ‘Competition Prioritisation Framework
Based on this plan, the OFT laid down a six-step process of prioritisation: (i) estimation of direct consumer benefit that would arise from intervention; (ii) estimating the deterrent effect as a result of enforcement; (iii) consideration of aggravating and mitigating factors that may strengthen or weaken the need to take action in any particular case; (iv) examining issues related to policy (e.g., priority sector), precedent (e.g., need for policy clarity), and profile (e.g, raising awareness of the OFT); (v) consideration of the OFT’s resources that would be required to achieve the desired outcome based on the evidence needed and the complexity of the case; and (vi) estimating the likelihood of success, that is the probability that the case will lead to the desired outcome (often an infringement decision). These first set of principles reflected a strong budget rationalisation goal, aiming to make the best use of its limited resources in terms of the real outcomes for UK consumers and to ensure that the OFT made the appropriate decisions about which projects and programmes of work it would undertake across all areas of its responsibility. The OFT was pressured, like other parts of the British Government, to deliver measured benefits to consumers of five times its annual budget over a period of 3 years. This agreement was part of the OFT’s settlement in the Comprehensive Spending Review 2007
Less than a year after the publication of the Prioritisation Framework, in late 2007, the OFT launched a consultation
A similar structure and substantive focus were reproduced in the 2014 Prioritisation Principles
The 2023 Prioritisation Principles: from consumer welfare to inclusive growth
The most important change in the CMA’s 2023 Prioritisation Guidelines is the disappearance of the consumer welfare standard for guiding the selection of cases. In fact, the term consumer welfare is no longer to be found in the new principles. Instead, the CMA is guided by a more inclusive and sustainable growth approach, frequently referring to concepts of fairness.
This shift is evident already in the first paragraph of the Principles: while the 2014 version prominently emphasized the role of economic aims (“the CMA’s mission is to make markets work well in the interests of consumers, businesses and the economy“), the 2023 version refers to wider and more social aims (“the CMA’s purpose is to help people, businesses, and the UK economy by promoting competitive markets and tackling unfair behaviour”). Notably, the new principles use the term ‘people’ rather than ‘consumers’, as the addressees of competition policy, indicating that all members of society should benefit from its enforcement efforts. The new principles also regard reducing the disparity across the different regions of the UK, noting that by promoting competition, the CMA “drive(s) innovation, productivity, and growth across the UK economy and across all 4 nations of the UK”. This focus was welcomed, in particular, by a national charity working with rural communities
The shift is also apparent in the framing of the ‘impact’ criteria for prioritisation. In the older version, the impact was defined and measured in terms of economic welfare, that is, what would be the likely direct and indirect effects on consumer welfare in the markets or sectors where the CMA’s intervention would take place, alongside any additional economic impact. The new version does not use such economic metrics but measures how substantive is the likely ‘positive impact’ of the CMA’s action. It includes the impact resulting from combating breaches of competition and consumer law that lead not only to “poor value for consumers in terms of price, quality, service or the range of products and services available”, but also and importantly, that “may cause physical harm, emotional distress or online harms (such as the misuse of personal data)”. The new Principles are also the first to emphasise that the selection of enforcement targets aims to benefit “people who need help the most”, namely to protect “vulnerability” taking a “range of forms”.
Finally, the shift towards inclusive and sustainable growth as a guiding prioritisation principle is reflected by the interpretation of the ‘Strategic Significance’ criteria for prioritisation. The new version clarifies that such criteria should be interpreted not only with reference to the CMA’s existing portfolio of cases and strategy, but also uses the language of Amartya Sen’s Capability Approach
A new era of competition law prioritisation?
The CMA’s new prioritisation principles align competition law enforcement more closely with new indicators adopted in the past decade to measure the success of economic policies by the British Government (such as those offered by the Office of National Statistics
This new prioritisation approach brings the CMA closer to British regulators in other areas of market regulation, who have already adjusted their interventions to the needs of “vulnerable citizens”, that is people who are significantly less able to protect their interests in markets, and/or significantly more likely to suffer substantial harm. It also brings the CMA closer to other competition authorities, such as the Competition Bureau Canada, which has been moving towards more inclusive competition law enforcement and promotion
Only time could tell if, and how, the new British Prioritisation Principles would affect a more sustainable and inclusive selection of enforcement targets by the CMA. In the meantime, the new principles invite new research and impact agendas to map and inform relevant vulnerabilities and enhance access to justice by vulnerable groups and civil society organisations representing them.