BIZCHINA> Review & Analysis
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Protecting consumers
(China Daily)
Updated: 2009-03-20 07:41 The Ministry of Commerce must have thoroughly considered the far-reaching implications of its decision to reject the $2.4 billion acquisition of Huiyuan Juice, China's leading juice maker, by Coca-Cola.
Chinese regulators, whose first and foremost priority is the interests of consumers, have rejected five of the 29 such cases it has investigated under the Anti-Monopoly Law since last August. The latest deal would have been the largest ever buyout of a Chinese firm by a foreign rival. However, upholding the rights of consumers, the Ministry of Commerce delivered its first rebuff under the country's new anti-trust law. "If the acquisition went into effect, Coca-Cola was very likely to reach a dominant position in the domestic market and consumers may have had to accept a higher price fixed by the company, as they would not have much choice," the ministry said in a statement. When the country's first Anti-Monopoly Law took effect last year after more than a decade of discussion, it was promoted as a "constitution for the market economy" and a boon for Chinese consumers that would stop the formation of monopolies. A lack of specific anti-monopoly regulations and guidelines once raised fears about the emergence of such corporate strangleholds. Therefore it is reassuring to know Chinese regulators have made consumer rights a top priority in this anti-trust filing. Coca-Cola's bid for Huiyuan was widely regarded as the first major test to the new Anti-Monopoly Law. The Ministry of Commerce should put the interests of consumers above all other concerns. While we're still waiting for regulators to publicize a detailed explanation of their decision, consumer voices have been conspicuously absent from this big anti-monopoly case. Both Coca-Cola and Huiyuan are extremely popular brands among Chinese, who pay scant regard to whether their favorite-tasting beverage is made by a Chinese or foreign firm. The alliance of the two firms would have increased pressure on other small companies in these specific drink markets. But a dominant market position does not necessarily come at a cost to consumers just as long as Chinese regulators can prevent any abuses stemming from it. Still, consumer interests are the main reasons for enacting anti-monopoly laws and regulators have shown their willingness to wield their newfound power to protect them. (For more biz stories, please visit Industries)
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