Labor Senators' Minority Report
TRADE PRACTICES
AMENDMENT (TELECOMMUNICATIONS) BILL 2001
1.1
Labor Senators do not oppose the amendments to the telecommunications
specific regulation in the Trade Practices Act 1974, although the
measures contained in the Bill are restricted and long overdue. They address
problems that have been evident for a considerable length of time.
1.2
The Senate Committee process has elucidated one point of particular
concern to Labor Senators. The Bill seeks to streamline the telecommunications
access regime by (amongst other things) limiting the evidence available on
appeals to the Australian Competition Tribunal (ACT) generally to that
available to the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC).[1]
1.3
The Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills noted[2]
that the new section 152DOA “specifies the matters to which the ACT may have
regard when it is conducting a review of a determination of the ACCC in
arbitrating a telecommunications access dispute. At present, review by the Tribunal
is a re-arbitration of the dispute, and the Tribunal may have regard to any
information, documents or evidence which it considers relevant, whether or not
those matters were before the ACCC in the course of making its initial
determination. Proposed new section 152DOA will, in effect, limit the Tribunal
to consideration of information, documents or evidence which were before the
ACCC initially.”[3]
1.4
The Explanatory Memorandum explains the need for this amendment by
stating that determinations by the ACCC “involve a lengthy and complex hearing
process” and that restricting the material which the Tribunal may consider
“will ensure that the Tribunal process involves a review of the Commission’s
decision, rather than a complete re-arbitration of the dispute”.[4]
1.5
Notably, in light of the evidence of witnesses to this Inquiry, the
Explanatory Memorandum also states that:
Although this option should reduce delay in the review of
Commission decisions, it will reduce the extent of Tribunal review. On balance,
it is considered that the limitations on the review are justified on the basis
of the length and depth of the Commission’s arbitration process.
1.6
A number of witnesses to this Inquiry have sought abolition of the
merits review to the ACT, including the ACCC. The carriers AAPT Ltd, Optus,
Primus Telecom and Macquarie Corporate Telecommunications collectively
submitted that the Committee should recommend that:
... the bill be amended to prevent a complete rehearing of
interconnect issues by the Australian Competition Tribunal [because] access
pricing decisions are complex and take time. The problem is delay. The ACCC
spends years making a decision and an unhappy party has the opportunity to have
the matter completely reconsidered in another forum [the ACT]. To draw an
analogy, it is like the players in a football game getting to the end of the
game and the losing party being able to elect to replay the game.[5]
1.7
The carriers argue that to avoid unacceptable delay in a fast-moving
market, it is only feasible for one body to consider the basic matters[6]
and as long as there are two opportunities for hearings on the fundamental
matters, the opportunity for delay remains.[7]
They consider that the integrity of the ACCC process is adequately protected by
the avenues of judicial review to the Federal Court or the High Court on
matters of law, which is comprehensive and searching into the reasoning and
analysis of ACCC decision making.[8]
1.8
Delay is a considerable concern for the industry, particularly as it
relates to price determinations, because it creates lengthy uncertainty,[9]
which delays investment decisions.[10]
Furthermore, the joint carriers consider the ACCC better placed to determine
these matters because it has the background expertise and experience, whereas
the ACT has never considered a telecommunications pricing issue – the current
rehearing will be its first consideration of these matters.[11]
1.9
The ACT has no resources of its own. The Federal
Court manages funds appropriated to the tribunal. Administrative support for
the Tribunal is provided by the Federal Court.[12]
Section 43B does however provide for the employment of consultants to perform
services for the Tribunal.
1.10
Arbitrations are conducted by three members of
the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission.
Unless the parties agree otherwise, arbitrations conducted by the Commission
are in private.[13]
Legal representation in such arbitrations is permitted.
1.11
The Commission has strong powers to give such
directions as are necessary to facilitate these negotiations.[14] These include directions that
relevant information be disclosed or research carried out. Like the ACT,[15] the Commission is not bound by
the rules of evidence, and may inform itself of any matter relevant to the
dispute in any way it thinks appropriate.[16]
1.12
Before making a determination in the arbitration
of a Telecommunications access dispute the Commission must give a draft
determination to the parties. When the Commission makes a determination it
must give the parties reasons for making its decision.[17]
1.13
Under section 152DO, a review by the ACT is a
re-arbitration of an access dispute. In a re-arbitration, the ACT has the same
powers as the ACCC. Section 152DQ provides that a party to an arbitration can
appeal to the Federal Court from the ACT on questions of law.
1.14
Another considerable concern for the witnesses representing the carriers
was that the review de novo by the ACT can be utilised for ‘regulatory gaming’,
that is, using the regulatory resources and muscle of the organisation at every
opportunity to frustrate competitive entry through exploiting the regulatory
regime to try to exhaust competitor resources.[18]
The merits review by the ACT seems to be contrary to the interests of
competition because delay in the pricing regime is detrimental to competitive
interests.[19]
1.15
Optus indicated that there have been problems with the ACT process due
to a lack of transparency, whereas the ACCC process has been “open and
transparent”, and the high costs in legal terms.[20]
1.16
In Australia, the length and detail of the first instance process by the
ACCC questions the need for a merits review. It suggests that judicial review
is sufficient.[21]
Indeed this was the position of the ACCC.[22]
1.17
Primus Telecom argued that another concern with the merits review is
that it may tend to have an intimidating effect on smaller access seekers. That
is, if even relatively larger players are being taken to the tribunal, and the
matter is being dragged out from scratch, the smaller access seekers will be
deterred from even taking a matter to the commission.[23]
1.18
The merits review is presently as of right. There is no restriction of
frivolous or vexatious matters for the de novo review. It has been suggested
that this encourages ‘regulatory gaming’ as Telstra would be able to bring a
review before the tribunal for a tactical or strategic delay to competitors and
would-be access seekers.[24]
1.19
Vodafone supported the merits review. It stated that:
We are supportive of a robust appeals process, but we do
recognise that the current process of being able to essentially start the whole
process over again through the ACT probably goes a little further than
necessary. We have suggested that we are reasonably relaxed about the bill’s approach in limiting evidence to that which is
initially provided to the ACCC. ... We support the notion of being able to go to
the ACT but, as we have said, we are relaxed about limiting the scope of being
able to completely relitigate the issue in front of the ACT.[25]
1.20
Vodafone did not object to the restriction that the Bill places on the
information that can be provided to the ACT to the information that was
originally provided to the ACCC. It saw the change as a trade-off:
[W]e are trying to shorten the time frame for the appeal
process, and putting restrictions on the types of new information that can be
provided actually stops parties potentially gaming the system by using the
appeal process to extend the process. We see that reform as a trade-off: while
we might lose some things by not being able to provide new information, it does
get the process finished sooner so that the industry can get those issues out
of the way and move forward.[26]
1.21
Furthermore Vodafone considers the enhanced appeals process (that is the
merits review to the ACT) as being an important part of the framework that
specifically regulates telecommunications companies and private investors like
Vodafone.[27]
1.22
Telstra gave evidence that the Bill addresses the most immediate
problems faced by the industry but does not ask for a premature overhaul of the
industry prior to the finalisation of the Productivity Commission review.[28]
Telstra questioned the motivations of its competitors in seeking such action
which goes beyond the intent of the Bill.[29]
1.23
The Australian Council for Infrastructure Development (AusCID, the
principal industry association representing the interests of companies and
organisations owning, operating, building, financing, designing and otherwise
providing advisory services to private investment in Australian public
infrastructure) submitted to the Committee that:[30]
AusCID considers that the removal of merits reviews are not in
the interests of any of the industry players or consumers in the long term. To
remove merits review would be akin to “throwing the baby out with the
bathwater”. ... The provision for merits review acts as an effective “insurance
policy” against any mistakes that may result from the regulatory system.
1.24
Even though efficiency and timeliness are
important in regulatory decision making processes, they are not the only
objectives, and removal of the merits review might have some undesirable
consequences, including:[31]
- Deterring investment in regulated or potentially regulated
telecommunications infrastructure because of a perceived regulatory risk (thus
increasing costs of raising capital and reducing expenditure on investment);
- Setting an damaging precedent for other infrastructure industries
affected by regulated decisions;
- Introducing uncertainty about investment, or returns on
investment, and reducing incentives for continued investment;
- Eroding the accountability of the decision maker (ie the ACCC)
that should accompany discretion where the regulator has a wide scope in which
to make decisions.
1.25
The Network Economics Consulting Group also
supported retention of merits review of the ACCC’s exercise of its powers
because the scope of the ACCC’s powers, the impact of its decisions and
particularly the significant economic consequences, warrant a high degree of
scrutiny and availability of merits review.[32]
NECG’s arguments supported those of AusCID. NECG’s submission argued that merits
review is warranted because:[33]
- The risk of error occurring in regulatory decision-making and the
costs of such error are very high;
- Efficient investment decisions require an understanding of the
approach that will be adopted by the regulator, so that investors can be
confident that it will not be subject to ill-founded or arbitrary
decision-making;
- Appeals on questions of law do not provide a sufficient
foundation for the confidence necessary for investment.
1.26
The Department of Communications, IT and the Arts submitted that the
reasons for including the amendment in the Bill limiting the information that
can be brought before the ACT instead of the abolition of the appeal for the
ACT are that:[34]
- The provision strikes a balance between competing interests;
- Merits review has, since its introduction in 1997, been
considered an important element of the package as a whole;
- Merits review is a presumed right for administrative decisions,
and is considered appropriate given the nature and breadth of the ACCC’s powers;
- fundamental reforms such as abolition of the merits review will
not be made prior to consideration of the Productivity Commission’s findings.
Conclusions
1.27
On balance, Labor Senators are not persuaded, at
this stage, to oppose the Government’s legislation. Notwithstanding doubts
regarding the merits review by the ACT, including the capacity and
appropriateness of the ACT to fulfil that role and the timeliness of
outcomes, Labor Senators consider it premature to make such a substantial
change to the process prior to consideration of the Productivity Commission
inquiries into Telecommunications Competition Regulation and
the National Access Regime, both of which will report within the next month.
1.28
Clearly there is some dissatisfaction with the present system of merits
review, however in view of the different positions of witnesses and submissions
to the Inquiry, consideration of the Productivity Commission’s detailed
analysis of the issue would be worthwhile prior to deciding on the most
appropriate course of action.
Recommendation
Labor Senators recommend that the issue of merits review by the
Australian Competition Tribunal as a part of the telecommunications access
regime be reconsidered in the context of the Productivity Commission’s
findings.
_______________________________
Senator Mark Bishop (A.L.P., W.A.)
Navigation: Previous Page | Contents | Next Page