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Small business concerns central to new competition law review, says Andrew Leigh

Australiaโ€™s competition policies will face a fresh federal government review, as market concentration and falling business formation rates set off alarm bells in Canberra.
David Adams
David Adams
competition
Assistant Minister for Competition, Charities and Treasury Andrew Leigh. Source: AAP Image/Mick Tsikas

Australiaโ€™s competition policies will face a fresh federal government review, as market concentration and falling business formation rates set off alarm bells in Canberra.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers and Assistant Minister for Competition, Charities and Treasury Andrew Leigh on Wednesday announced the formation of a new Treasury taskforce, entasked with a two-year review of competition laws, policy settings, and institutions.

It will initially cover proposed reforms to merger laws, the coordination of competition settings across states and territories, whether non-compete clauses are stifling wages, and how new technological and green energy developments are shaping the competition landscape.

The review will produce its findings on a rolling basis, with public consultations set for the months ahead.

Speaking to SmartCompany, Leigh said the review is backdropped by evidence of big businesses dominating their markets.

โ€œWe know that market concentration has risen, price markups have increased,โ€ Leigh said.

At the same time, sluggish business formation rates point to the difficulties of building a competing business from scratch, leading to poor outcomes for entrepreneurs and workers alike.

โ€œWe know the rate of employing small businesses being created has declined, and job switching has gone down.โ€

โ€œWeโ€™re very keen to see small businesses starting upโ€: Andrew Leigh

News of the review comes just before the release of the next Intergenerational Report, which is slated to show Australiaโ€™s population will both grow, and age, over the next 40 years.

Boosting productivity through new and innovative businesses will be โ€œcriticalโ€ to provide for that population, Leigh said, underscoring the need for competition settings that allow new entrants to flourish.

โ€œThe risk is that people donโ€™t set up a new business because they donโ€™t think they can compete with the incumbents,โ€ he said.

โ€œWeโ€™re very keen to see small businesses starting up because thatโ€™s a primary source of productivity growth for the economy.

โ€œItโ€™s a chance for workers to have more options.

โ€œAnd historically, new business formation has been critical to the health of the Australian economy.

โ€œSo itโ€™s not just good for those who have started a business, itโ€™s good for the whole ecosystem.โ€

ACCC merger rule proposal under consideration

The taskforce will initially consider reforms proposed by the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC), whose chair, Gina Cass-Gottlieb, in April declared Australiaโ€™s merger laws are no longer fit for purpose and leave some markets vulnerable to anti-competitive conduct.

Cass-Gottlieb suggested the merger approval process should be flipped โ€” instead of the ACCC launching federal court challenges to mergers it deems anti-competitive, businesses would have to prove the merits of their proposed merger before it takes place.

Notably, her predecessor in the role, Rod Sims, will sit on an expert panel advising the taskforce.

โ€œThe ACCC, under [former chair] Rod Sims and Gina Cass-Gottlieb, has suggested to governments that reforms should be made in the merger space,โ€ Leigh said.

โ€œWeโ€™re not announcing specifics on the merger changes today, but weโ€™re certainly open to to making changes if the evidence backs it up.โ€

Non-competes and renewables on the agenda

Since the Albanese government took office in 2022, it has made unfair contract terms a focal point of its competition agenda.

Those reforms have been largely contained to unfair contract terms between businesses, but the taskforce will consider if non-compete clauses are unfairly stopping workers from taking more productive and higher-paying roles.

โ€œThe issue is that one in five workers today are impeded from moving to a better job by non-compete clause, and thatโ€™s not just affecting tech executives,โ€ Leigh said.

โ€œItโ€™s also affecting early childcare workers.

โ€œSo weโ€™re gonna have a careful look at non-compete clauses, and make sure that theyโ€™re not stifling productivity and wage growth in the Australian economy.โ€

Another key development from the Albanese government is the National Reconstruction Fund, a $15 billion investment pool targeted towards high-tech manufacturing in areas like clean energy, agriculture, forestry and fisheries, and mining.

Ensuring fair competition settings now will help up-and-coming businesses compete in those priority areas, Leigh said.

โ€œWe know the energy sector has traditionally been quite concentrated particularly in the generation side, and weโ€™re keen to ensure that as we make the renewables transition, that there is thriving competition there.โ€

After a year largely defined by soaring energy costs, Leigh flagged the benefits of strong competition rules for both businesses and energy consumers.

โ€œItโ€™s in the interest of the business sector more broadly to have a competitive electricity generation sector,โ€ he said.