Chapter 2 - Trade Practices Amendment (Telecommunications) Bill 2001
2.1
The amendments in the bill can be considered
together in relation to their intended effect. Some amendments aim to
encourage commercial negotiation on terms and conditions between access seekers
and access providers so that agreement is reached and disputes do not get
notified to the ACCC to activate the arbitration process, other amendments aim
to expedite the ACCC’s arbitration process following notification, as well as
the review processes of these determinations.
Amendments which encourage commercial negotiation for access to services
Mandatory publication of pricing principles
2.2
Pricing principles provide the ACCC’s views on
various methodological issues surrounding the pricing of a service and can also
give preliminary views about the various pricing claims that have been made in
relation to a service. The pricing principles are currently published by the
ACCC as a matter of administrative practice and there is no legislative
recognition of them.
2.3
Item 1 of the bill, inserts a new section 152AQA
into the Trade Practices Act (the Act) which will require the ACCC to determine
principles relating to the price of access to a declared service. It must
publish these pricing principles as soon as practicable after declaring a
service or varying a declaration, and have regard to them when it arbitrates an
access dispute. The new section will build on current ACCC practice by making
the publication of principles mandatory.
2.4
Where pricing principles are established, the
Explanatory Memorandum suggests that their more timely release will encourage
commercial negotiation by providing increased certainty in regulatory outcomes.[1] In addition, the conduct of
ACCC arbitrations should also be expedited.
2.5
New section 152AQA will only apply to services
that are declared or varied after the provisions in the bill commence (item
23).
Response in submissions
2.6
Vodafone Pacific Limited (Vodafone) considered
that it is vital for pricing principles to be considered and finalised before a
declaration is made in order to avoid uncertainty in the market place and delay
commercial negotiations.[2]
In effect, this would mean that the pricing principles determination would be
made at the same time as the service is declared by the ACCC. Vodafone
considered that proposed section 152AQA in the bill gives the ACCC too much
flexibility in the timing of determining its pricing principles. Vodafone
suggested that by providing leeway for the ACCC to make a determination ‘as soon
as practicable after’ a service is declared (subsection 152AQA(3)), there is a
risk of disconnecting the pricing principles from the declaration process:
In our view, if pricing principles are not considered at the
time a service is declared—in other words, nobody knows how this regulated
service will be priced—then we are not sure how you can actually know whether
the regulation is going to be in the interests of Australia.[3]
2.7
In addition, Vodafone noted that it is important
for consideration to be given to the form of the pricing principle and included
in the declaration analysis because different pricing principles could
potentially sway the analysis on whether a service should be declared.
2.8
AAPT was concerned that the construction of the
Act with the new subsection 152AQA(6) requiring the ACCC to have regard to its
determinations of pricing principles when arbitrating an access dispute, in
conjunction with a requirement in section 152CQ(6) preventing the ACCC from
making a determination that is inconsistent with a Ministerial pricing
determination, will enable the ACCC to make decisions in relation to
arbitrations which are different from its own pricing principle determinations:
The amendments proposed in the bill are that the ACCC be
required to provide pricing principles when they declare a service but they are
subsequently only required to have regard to those pricing principles when they
determine disputes, whereas if it was a ministerial pricing determination they
would need to apply those consistently.[4]
2.9
AAPT was of the view that if there is benefit in
the ACCC generating pricing principles to provide information and certainty to
the market, then it must be incumbent upon the ACCC to only resolve disputes in
accordance with these principles.[5]
2.10
AAPT recommended that the bill be amended to
require the ACCC to resolve access disputes in accordance with its pricing
principles.[6]
In response to this, the Department informed the Committee that:
I think the principal purpose of this amendment [in the bill] is
to encourage the ACCC to make its pricing principles as soon as practicable
around the same time that it is making its declaration of service. I think the
AAPT proposal is a much broader, more fundamental proposal—which, as I
understand it, is that, rather than pricing principles being a tool where the
ACCC sets out what its basic principles are and what it is likely to have
regard to in making its final determinations, in effect those pricing
principles would be binding upon the ACCC and, in a sense, would be like a
standard pricing formula.[7]
2.11
The Department added that as a matter of good
practice, it would be expected that the ACCC had regard to its pricing
principles, but to make them binding would be fairly inflexible and not allow
the ACCC to look at the particular merits of the arguments in the particular
determinations before them.[8]
2.12
Further, the Department suggested that if the
pricing principles were binding on the ACCC, it would arguably create
additional grounds for appeal:
So, once again, if they have to strictly abide by the pricing
principles, there can be a range of different disputes about whether they have
and the extent to which they have actually complied with their own pricing
principles. If they have to have regard to them, you are less likely to run
into problems with appeals on those grounds. As long as they have turned their
minds to their pricing principles and thought through them from a legal point
of view, that should be sufficient.[9]
2.13
Primus Telecommunications Pty Ltd (Primus)
recommended an amendment to the bill to expand the application provisions so
that the new section 152AQA would apply to services which have already been
declared:
As most of the services which are likely to be declared pursuant
to Part XIC of the TPA have already been declared, proposed section 152AQA
would be of little practical benefit to the industry if it did not apply to
services which were declared before the commencement of the amending
Act.[10]
2.14
Primus argued that its amendment would reduce
the ability of a powerful incumbent to engage in regulatory gaming because any
pricing principles which had been developed by the ACCC would form a clear
starting point for existing access disputes. This would, to a large extent,
prevent an access provider from seeking to have a matter reviewed by the
Australian Competition Tribunal on the basis that the ACCC had applied the
wrong pricing principles.[11]
2.15
Whilst the ACCC supported the amendment in the
bill, it noted that compliance with the new provisions will require it to
consider both the issues of declaration and pricing at same time, and this will
lengthen its inquiry into the declaration of a service. This may require a
reconsideration of the ACCC’s indicative time frames for inquiry, although
there will generally be efficiencies between the two processes.[12]
Resolution of disputes in a timely manner, including through alternative
dispute resolution mechanisms
2.16
Greater use of alternative dispute resolution
(ADR) mechanisms (eg conciliation, mediation and private arbitration) may reduce
the time taken to resolve access disputes. Alternative dispute resolution can
act as a ‘filtering’ process, resolving disputes more quickly, and reducing the
areas of any remaining dispute. Greater use of alternative dispute resolution
will also lessen the number of disputes in the formal arbitration process,
thereby freeing up ACCC resources to more quickly resolve disputes that still
require formal arbitration.
2.17
The current provisions in Part XIC give the ACCC
power to direct parties to enter into mediation and require it to conduct
arbitrations as speedily as proper consideration of the dispute allows.
However, there is currently no guiding principle in Part XIC which
encourages the ACCC to exercise its powers under that Part in a way which will encourage
timely resolution of disputes and to have regard to alternative dispute
resolution techniques that will achieve this outcome.
2.18
Items 2 and 3 of the bill make amendments to the
Act, which specify that the ACCC, in exercising its powers prior to the
notification of a dispute as well as during the resolution of disputes, has
regard to the desirability of agreements on terms and conditions, and
resolutions of disputes being done in a timely manner. The amendments
therefore provide the ACCC with the flexibility to decide whether or not
alternative dispute resolution would be appropriate for the particular
circumstances at hand, taking into account the relative bargaining positions of
the parties, and the issues raised.
2.19
Despite the benefits of alternative dispute
resolution, there is a danger that where it is unsuccessful, it can result in
further delays to the dispute resolution process, particularly where parties
have limited areas of agreement or where there is a large difference in
bargaining power between the parties. For this reason, while the amendments
place a greater onus on the ACCC to refer appropriate disputes to alternative
dispute resolution, they allow it to use its discretion in a manner that
promotes the timely resolution of disputes. In addition, the amendments build
on existing requirements of the ACCC to act expeditiously.
2.20
In order to facilitate negotiations, existing
section 152BBA allows the ACCC to give a procedural direction if requested by
either party to the negotiations. Examples of the kinds of procedural
directions that may be given are provided in subsection 152BBA(3) and they
include directions to engage in alternative dispute resolution.
2.21
Section 152BBC allows a representative of the
ACCC to attend to mediate at negotiations if jointly requested to do so by the
parties to the negotiation.
2.22
Item 2 of the bill, inserts a new section 152BBD
into the Act which requires the ACCC, when exercising its powers under sections
152BBA and 152BBC, to have regard to the desirability of terms and conditions
for access being agreed in a timely manner.
Publication of results of, and reasons for, interim and final
determinations by the ACCC
2.23
Because ACCC arbitrations are private, the
results of and reasons behind the arbitrations are also kept confidential.
2.24
Item 7 of the bill inserts a new section 152CRA
into the Act which will alter this situation. New section 152CRA will allow
the ACCC to publish a determination and the reasons for making the
determination. Before it does so however, it must inform each party to the
determination what it proposes to publish, and invite submissions on the
proposition which it must consider in its decision to publish.
2.25
The aim of this amendment is to create a
bargaining situation in the market such that economically efficient access
prices will be realised.[13]
Publication of arbitration outcomes would improve the public transparency of
ACCC decision-making and enable the disclosure of key information to the market
which would in turn promote commercial resolution of future disputes in
relation to the same declared service. The Productivity Commission, in its
draft report, considered that making public the full outcomes of arbitrations
would encourage commercial negotiations between parties who may opt for the commercial
confidentiality of negotiations.
2.26
According to the Explanatory Memorandum,[14] publishing the results of, and
reasons for, arbitrations would help guide the future commercial negotiations
between access seekers and access providers. By providing certainty with
regards to the likely outcome of an ACCC arbitration, there is a greater chance
that the parties will find a mutually acceptable price. This will reduce the
need for arbitration, allow disputes to be resolved quickly, and is consistent
with the philosophy of the access regime which is to promote commercial
negotiation.
2.27
Item 23 provides that new section 152CRA applies
only in relation to determinations made after commencement.
Response in submissions
2.28
The ACCC informed the Committee in its submission,
that knowledge of previous determinations, their reasons, and pricing
principles, is likely over time, to inform the private negotiations of access
providers and access seekers and so reduce the uncertainties and/or strategic
behaviour which currently result in so many disputes being notified.[15] Items 1 and 7 in the bill
will therefore assist in breaking down some of the deficiencies in the existing
arrangements for hearing disputes.
2.29
Whilst supporting the publication of
determinations, Vodafone was concerned that the amendment would allow the ACCC
to publish commercially sensitive input data that is provided to it by the
parties to a dispute.[16]
It considered that cost and other confidential company information should not
be published without the agreement of the party providing the information.
2.30
The Committee notes that the consultation
provisions in the new section provide that, prior to publication of a
determination and its reasons, the ACCC must inform each party to the
determination of what it proposes to publish, and it must have regard to any
submissions from the parties which it receives in response. The Explanatory
Memorandum informs that this will give parties an opportunity to raise issues
of confidentiality with the ACCC.[17]
Backdating determinations
2.31
Currently, the ACCC can backdate the effect of a
determination to a specified date, not earlier than the date of notification of
a dispute. This provision is intended to remove incentives for parties to
delay resolution of the dispute, but an unintended outcome is that it
encourages access seekers to notify disputes to the ACCC at the earliest
possible opportunity, thereby invoking a formal ACCC process and discouraging
commercial resolution of the dispute.
2.32
Item 16 substitutes subsection 152DNA(2) so that
the ACCC may backdate the effect of determinations to a date not earlier than
when the parties commenced negotiations. Item 23 provides that the amendment
will only apply in relation to access disputes that are notified after
commencement.
2.33
The ACCC’s power remains a discretion to
backdate. The Explanatory Memorandum informs that this does not affect the
discretion of the ACCC as to when, if at all, it shall backdate the effect of a
determination.[18]
In exercising its discretion, the ACCC could have regard to issues such as the
date of supply of the service and the bona fides of negotiations.
2.34
The bill contains transitional provisions in
relation to new subsection 152DNA(2) at item 24. The effect of this item is
that where a dispute is notified prior to commencement, the ACCC retains its
power to backdate to the date of notification of the dispute. Where a dispute
is notified after commencement, the ACCC has a discretion to backdate to the
date of commencement or the date that negotiations started, whichever is the
later.
Response in submissions
2.35
AAPT is involved in an arbitration with Telstra
about the price of access to PSTN originating and terminating services. This
dispute was notified to the ACCC in December 1998 - a date preceding the date
of commencement of the Telecommunications Legislation Amendment Act 1999,
which contained the current backdating provisions. A final determination on
the dispute was issued by the ACCC on 13 September 2000 and this
determination is currently under review by the Australian Competition Tribunal.[19]
2.36
AAPT suggested in its submission that the
consequence of the original backdating provisions was to revise the power of
the ACCC to determine AAPT’s dispute.[20]
In addition, the fact that the dispute relating to the price for PSTN
originating and terminating services is still not finally resolved, despite its
status as a declared service, means that it remains in an unregulated state
which belies the intent of the access regime introduced in 1997 (ie to
deregulate telecommunications and develop competition).
2.37
AAPT’s concerns in relation to the bill, were
that the backdating provisions will not apply to its outstanding dispute. AAPT
considered that this goes against the intention of the 1997 legislation that
deregulated telecommunications:
It is of concern to AAPT that the current legislative changes
fail to recognise that the original 1997 intent continues to be frustrated. ...
it has always been both the Government and Parliament’s intention that
competition was being introduced from 1 July 1997. ...
... the proposed transitional provisions relating to the new
backdating provision create the same limitation in relation to backdating to
the date of notification of a disputes. That is, that the power to backdate to
the commencement of negotiations only applies if the dispute is notified after
the commencement of the provisions.[21]
2.38
Given that its dispute remains current, AAPT
believed that it is still relevant for the Parliament to correct the
legislative process and bring to bear the intent of the original 1997
legislation. In addition, AAPT submitted that there are only two disputes
which would be affected by widening the application of backdating provisions.[22]
2.39
Primus also advocated that the application
provision relating to item 16 be widened to enable new subsection 152DNA(2) to
apply to access disputes that are on foot at the time of commencement as well
as to those notified after commencement.
2.40
Telstra agreed with the intent of this amendment
but had concerns about the wide discretion conferred upon the ACCC:[23]
Provided that that provision is implemented in a way where the
ACCC, in exercising that discretion, gives reasons for where backdating does
and does not occur and does not induce players not to finalise commercial deals
in order to keep their backdating options open, it will work. However, if you
wanted to improve upon it, you would require some recognition of the priority
of commercial agreement to be inserted into that decision making process.[24]
Department’s response
2.41
The Department was of the view that it would not
be equitable to amend the law so that it would in effect apply in a
retrospective fashion:
To allow the ACCC to go back further [than commencement] would
mean that people who had ordered their affairs in a certain way before
commencement of this legislation on the basis of the law as it stands ... would
add a retrospectivity to the operation of the law, which we think would be
unfair and inequitable in terms of the behaviour of parties before the
commencement of the legislation.[25]
Amendments to streamline the arbitration process and minimise delays
2.42
AAPT provided its view of the impact of delays
in the operation of the regime:
... delay in this regime can cause more damage to competition than
a need to adjust the access price. Delay is the fatal error in the context of
telecommunications. As we mentioned earlier, this is a fairly fast moving
industry, and one of the reasons for wanting an access regime rather than
relying upon general competition law was the fact that general competition law
is about seeking damages to rectify events in the past and we need the ability
to resolve disputes in near real time.[26]
2.43
The following amendments are intended to improve
efficiencies and speed up the arbitration process.
Resolution of disputes about access
2.44
Similarly to item 2, item 3 of the bill inserts
new section 152CLA which requires the ACCC, in exercising its powers under
Division 8 (Resolution of disputes about access) to have regard to the
desirability of access disputes being resolved in a timely manner, including
through the use of alternative dispute resolution methods.
2.45
Although critical of the ACCC’s case management
techniques, Telstra was supportive of the provisions in the bill relating to
the use of alternative dispute resolution:
In Telstra’s opinion, ADR and case management are the keys to
quicker decision making and give less recourse to formal arbitration. More
than any other single measure contained in this bill, case management and ADR
tactics have the potential to transform the way in which disputes between
carriers are managed. While we are strongly supportive of the proposed section
152CLA in the bill, we think that merely requiring the ACCC to have regard to
use of alternative dispute resolution methods may not go far enough. Telstra
believes the ACCC should also be positively required to adopt best practice
case management techniques.[27]
2.46
Telstra informed the Committee that it has
achieved more by locking people away in a room for a couple of weeks than that
which would have taken several years of arbitration to achieve.[28]
Withdrawal of notification of a dispute
2.47
An access seeker, carrier or provider, may
notify the ACCC that an access dispute exists under section 152CM of the Act,
and this notification may only be withdrawn before the ACCC makes its final
determination on the matter as specified in section 152CN. According to the
Explanatory Memorandum to the bill, there is currently potential for strategic
abuse of section 152CN by both access providers and access seekers.[29]
2.48
To remove the potential for regulatory gaming,
the bill repeals and substitutes subsections 152CN(1) and (2) (item 4) to
require the joint consent of both parties to a dispute for a notification to be
withdrawn. Failing agreement by the parties, the ACCC will have a reserve
power to terminate a dispute where it considers that one party is withholding
consent unreasonably.
2.49
The amendment is designed to prevent strategic
abuse of the notification and withdrawal provisions to either prolong disputes
and delay access to declared services, or to gain price advantages.
2.50
Item 23 of the bill provides that these
amendments will apply in relation to access disputes that are notified after
commencement.
Response in submissions
2.51
The ACCC considered that the amendments are the
least burdensome option for advancing any-to-any connectivity and competition
objectives. For example, it is considered less burdensome than empowering the
ACCC to reinstate an arbitration that has been terminated by the access seeker.[30]
2.52
However, the ACCC suggested that the solution to
the problem may not be as simple as removing the ability of an access seeker to
terminate an arbitration notified by an access provider. In most cases this
will be a desirable outcome but the ACCC advocated that a further amendment
should be included in the bill to address a potential limitation in the
definition of ‘access seeker’ in section 152AG of the Act:
It has been argued that a carrier cannot be characterised as an
‘access seeker’ where it has not sought, and does not want, access to a
network, and that it would therefore fall outside the definition of ‘access
seeker’ in section 152AG. If this interpretation is correct, a carrier may
still be able to exploit the provisions of the Act to do, in effect, what it could
not do in the reverse situation as an access provider (ie refuse to deal
with another carrier or carriage service provider).[31]
Removal of an access seeker’s right to object to the making of an interim
determination
2.53
Under subsection 152CPA the ACCC can make an
interim determination in relation to an access dispute which will have effect
on the date specified. The ACCC first issues a draft determination and
provides a period of at least 7 business days during which an access seeker can
object to the determination. If the ACCC receives written notice of an
objection within the specified period, it must not make the interim
determination. This right of veto protects an access seeker from being subject
to the determination.
2.54
Item 5 of the bill repeals subsection 152CPA(3)
in the Act which has the effect of removing the right of an access seeker to
object to the ACCC making an interim determination. The Explanatory Memorandum
explains that this amendment is consistent with a draft recommendation of the
Productivity Commission[32]
which advocated the provision’s removal on the basis that it distributes
unequal rights between the contesting parties.
2.55
Item 5 applies in relation to access disputes
that are notified after commencement (item 23).
ACCC to be constituted by one or more members
2.56
Item 8 amends subsection 152CV(1) to allow the
ACCC, for the purposes of a particular arbitration, to be constituted by one or
more members of the Commission nominated by the Chairperson. This contrasts
with the current situation where a telecommunications access dispute hearing is
to be held by at least two Commissioners.
2.57
This change is to facilitate the speedy
resolution of disputes. The decision on the constitution of the Commission for
a particular arbitration would remain with the Chairperson of the ACCC, who
would be able to prevent attempts by any individual party to a dispute to have
an arbitration conducted by a particular Commissioner. In addition, the
Chairperson would retain the discretion to use more than one Commissioner for
significant and complex arbitration hearings.[33]
2.58
Items 9, 10 and 11 make amendments to the Act,
consequential on the amendment made by item 8. These changes reflect the
various scenarios whereby the Commission can be constituted by a single Commissioner,
as well as by two or more Commissioners.
Provision of information between arbitrations
2.59
Unless the parties otherwise agree, access
arbitrations must be conducted in private. The ACCC is currently restricted in
its use of relevant information from one arbitration in another arbitration.
This means that common information obtained through one arbitration cannot be
provided to parties to another arbitration, even where that information is not
confidential. The ACCC must consult all of the relevant parties prior to using
the information and consider their submissions on whether the disclosure of the
information will prejudice a party’s commercial position. This process can
take some time and there is the potential for gaming in the release of information.
2.60
Item 14 inserts a new section 152DBA into the
Act which would allow the ACCC to provide information (including costings,
methodology and price information) that has been obtained from an (ongoing or
previous) arbitration, to a party to another arbitration. The ACCC may only
use this power where it considered that the provision of information between
separate arbitrations will enable the arbitrations to be conducted in a more
efficient and timely manner.
2.61
The new section requires the ACCC to consult
with the contributor of the information or document before providing it, and
specifies matters which the ACCC must consider before making the decision to
provide the information (such as the contributor’s submission with respect to
the release of the information).
2.62
Item 23 provides that the new section 152DB
applies in relation to access dispute that are notified either before or after
commencement.
Response in submissions
2.63
Primus proposed that subsection 152DBA(2) be
amended to add a requirement that the ACCC consider whether the exercise of its
power under the section would result in the promotion of the object of Part XIC
of the Act (that is, to promote the long-term interests of end-users of
carriage services or of services provided by means of carriage services).[34]
2.64
Primus considered that this would give the ACCC
broader scope for considering information from another access dispute where it
is appropriate to do so, having regard to the long-term interests of end-users.[35]
2.65
The Committee suggests that the ‘long-term
interests of end-users’ objective underpins the operation of Part XIC of the
Act. It applies to all sections in the Part, regardless of whether or not it
is explicitly stated in particular sections, and therefore Primus’ suggested
amendment may be unnecessary.
Joint arbitration hearings
2.66
Part XIC of the Act currently provides for the
ACCC to conduct individual arbitrations of each notified dispute between an
access provider and an access seeker. Separate hearings of common disputes
result in a series of arbitrations which can slow down the resolution of
disputes.
2.67
Item 15 of the bill inserts a new section 152DMA
into the Act which permits the ACCC to conduct a joint arbitration hearing of
two or more access disputes where one or more matters are common to the
disputes and the Chairperson considers that a joint arbitration hearing would
result in the disputes being resolved in a more efficient and timely manner.
2.68
Item 23 provides that new section 152DMA applies
to access disputes that are notified either before or after commencement.
Response in submissions
2.69
Vodafone had concerns about the circumstances
which might prompt the holding of a joint arbitration hearing. New subsection
152DMA(1) permits the holding of a joint hearing if ‘one or more matters are common’
to two or more access disputes being arbitrated at a particular time. Vodafone
suggested that the disputes should be substantially the same in all material
respects for a joint hearing to be held. This is because:
Telecommunications issues are often complex and relatively small
variations in either the context or the details surrounding a dispute will have
a significant impact on the outcome.[36]
2.70
In its submission Vodafone provided a process
which it believed should be followed by the ACCC before making a decision about
holding a joint hearing.
2.71
The Committee is not persuaded by Vodafone’s
concern in relation to joint arbitration hearings. The Explanatory Memorandum
states that:
The joint arbitration hearing is a procedural mechanism that
allows the Commission to hear matters common to more than one dispute at the
same time. It is a joint hearing of matters common to more than one
arbitration, not the joining of the parties into a single arbitration. At the
end of each joint arbitration hearing, the parties will return to their
particular arbitration proceedings and the Commission will make an appropriate
determination in relation to each particular arbitration.[37]
2.72
In addition, the Department made it clear that
it is not a case of the arbitrations themselves being joined:[38]
The way the joint hearing provisions are intended to work is
that the Commission would hear common matters—say, relating to the same
dispute, relating to the same declared services—that it could hear common
evidence. ... It would hear those matters, take the evidence and the
arbitrations would then separate. They would still retain their separate
nature so that, if there were particular issues relating to a particular
arbitration, they could be considered privately by the commission, but all the
common issues ... could be heard together and the separate issues heard
separately afterwards just as a way of streamlining the process.[39]
Amendments relating to review of Australian Competition and Consumer
Commission arbitration determinations and appeals of Australian Competition
Tribunal reviews
Limiting the matters to which the Australian Competition Tribunal may have
regard for the purposes of a review
2.73
Section 152DO of the Act enables a party to a
final determination of an access dispute to apply to the Australian Competition
Tribunal (the Tribunal) for a review of the determination. The review is a
re-arbitration of the access dispute and the Tribunal has all the powers of the
ACCC in this regard.
2.74
In order to reduce delay in the review of ACCC
decisions, the bill inserts a new section 152DOA into the Act (item 19) to limit the matters which the
Tribunal may consider in its review, so that it may only consider evidence,
information or documents that were either given to the ACCC or referred to by
the ACCC in its reasons for making the final determination. This will prevent
a party to a dispute from introducing new evidence at the review, in an attempt
to delay the process.
2.75
The
Explanatory Memorandum justifies this limitation on the Tribunal by explaining
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’.[40]
2.76
The Committee
finds it curious that the intention of the amendment is to prevent a ‘complete
re-arbitration of the dispute’ and yet subsection 152DO(3) of the Act
specifically states that ‘[a] review by the Tribunal is a re-arbitration of the
access dispute’.[41]
2.77
The Committee
notes that the Senate Scrutiny of Bills Committee had concerns that proposed
new section 152DOA may be considered to trespass unduly on personal rights and
liberties because it will reduce the extent of Tribunal review.[42] Whilst
restricting the evidence to that which was before the ACCC is likely to speed
up the resolution of access disputes insofar as delays are occasioned by the
introduction of fresh evidence, it will not affect delays that are attributable
to other causes.
2.78
In addition, it is
unclear whether it will prevent ‘gaming’ by telecommunications companies, as
there will be other opportunities to introduce delays into the process of
determining access terms and conditions, for example, a party to an arbitration
before the ACCC may seek to delay the arbitration process by deluging the ACCC
with information on topics of peripheral relevance.
2.79
The Scrutiny of
Bills Committee has requested advice from the Minister as to how the existing
review processes have been abused and whether the Tribunal has been consulted
about the proposed changes.[43]
The Minister’s response to this request will not be available before this
Committee reports on the bill.
2.80
Item 23 provides that item 19 applies in
relation to applications for review that are made after commencement.
Response in submissions
2.81
Notwithstanding the concerns of the Scrutiny of
Bills Committee, opinions in submissions ranged from support for the amendment
(Vodafone, Telstra) to suggestions that the opportunity for Tribunal review of
ACCC determinations should be abolished altogether (Primus, Optus, joint
carriers, ACCC).
2.82
Primus and other witnesses, strenuously urged
the Committee to consider the abolition of merits review in relation to access disputes
determined by the ACCC. They proposed that the provisions in Part XIC of the
Trade Practices Act relating to the Australian Competition Tribunal reviewing
final determinations of the ACCC ought to be repealed. Primus submitted that
the review process has been misused by Telstra as a form of gross regulatory
gaming, the apparent purpose of which is:[44]
- tying-up its opponents [sic] legal and regulatory resources; and
- intimidating access seekers wishing to lodge an access dispute with the
Commission, by making it clear that if they do so they will be likely to be
subjected to a lengthy and costly arbitration process and then an even more
length[y] and costly review process. As access seekers may therefore be
reluctant to lodge access disputes, this may in turn effectively enable the
incumbent to charge monopoly prices to access seekers for declared services,
notwithstanding Part XIC.[45]
2.83
AAPT, whilst noting that there is a strong basis
for arguing that there should be no right of review to the Tribunal because the
ACCC arbitration is not a regulatory event, but a dispute deciding event,[46] recommended instead that the
application of new section 152DOA be widened to encompass all final
determinations made in relation to access disputes.[47] The effect of this would be
that the Tribunal would be restricted in the evidence to which it could have
regard in all reviews that have not concluded before commencement.
2.84
AAPT argued that if the application of the new
section 152DOA is not widened to encompass all final determinations, the
intention of the new section to reduce delays will not be realised:
... the relevance of 152DOA, and in
fact the rest of the regulatory amendments, will have no impact on future
disputes while ever the existing PSTN access dispute is before the Tribunal for
consideration. Principally, this is because Telstra has made this review a ‘cause
celebre’ specifying that the need for the review is to determine underlying
principles in relation to access pricing. Telstra has clearly signalled their
intent to take both the ULL final determinations and local carriage resale
pricing determinations to review by the Tribunal as soon as the ACCC finally
determines those matters. Consequently, there will be no real progress made,
until such time as the PSTN matter is finalised.[48]
2.85
Failing the removal of merits review, Primus was
concerned at the drafting of proposed section 152DOA. It considered that a
party with substantial legal and regulatory resources at its disposal could
take advantage of the new provisions by submitting as much information,
documents and evidence as it possibly can during an arbitration before the
ACCC, for the purposes of:
- delaying the arbitration;
- further regulatory gaming, by way of
‘out-resourcing’ its opponents;
- broadening the scope of matters it may
subsequently argue before the Tribunal; and
- due to (b) above, restricting the submissions
which its opponents may wish to make and the evidence which its opponents may
wish to adduce before the Tribunal.[49]
2.86
Primus informed the Committee in its submission
that it has already seen evidence of Telstra apparently attempting to behave in
the above manner in at least one current arbitration before the ACCC.[50]
2.87
In addition, Primus was concerned that a strict
reading of the new provisions may take away the right of a party to a Tribunal
review to be able to rebut any matters on which another party makes submissions
or cites as evidence.[51]
Primus suggested an amendment to new section 152DOA to circumvent this problem.
2.88
Cable & Wireless Optus (Optus) advocated the
abolition of merits review by the Tribunal, but should it be retained, raised
issues about the rights of third parties joined to Tribunal proceedings.
2.89
As a general rule, Optus believed that the
Tribunal should only have regard to information previously given to the ACCC or
referred to by the ACCC.[52]
However, it argued that new section 152DOA overly limits the information to
which the Tribunal should have regard. Third parties joined to the Tribunal
proceedings should be entitled to present their own evidence. By way of
illustration, Optus explained its own situation:
Optus has been joined to the Telstra ACT appeal in relation to
determinations made in disputes between Primus and Telstra, and AAPT and
Telstra. Given that Optus was not previously a party to the arbitrations,
Optus should be entitled to present evidence to the Tribunal which we have
necessarily not had the opportunity to present at arbitrations to which we were
not a party.[53]
2.90
In addition, Optus considered that the Tribunal
should be able to have regard to information deliberately withheld from the
ACCC during an arbitration:
For example, there may be internal transfer pricing information
held by a party to the arbitration which was not disclosed to the Commission
but which the Tribunal believes is relevant and should be disclosed.[54]
2.91
Optus suggested an additional subsection to new
section 152DOA which would alleviate these concerns. As an alternative, Optus
suggested the Tribunal be granted discretion to admit evidence that it considers
appropriate, having regard to the principles suggested in the bill.[55]
2.92
The Department informed the Committee that it
had considered these issues when the bill was drafted but an attempt was made
to strike a balance between competing arguments.[56] Although Tribunal reviews of
ACCC final determinations were not removed from the regime, this amendment
tries to limit the review process and ensure that it is contained and does not
go too far:
You can probably think of a thousand different particular
examples where someone could raise a situation where they would like to have it
seek the discretion of the ACT to say, ‘This new evidence should be
introduced,’ or ‘That new evidence should be introduced’. The overall
principle in this bill is a general principle of no new evidence on the basis
that, if you have a power to introduce new evidence in a particular
circumstance, you have the procedural delay of deciding whether or not the new
evidence should be introduced, whether it meets the criteria and probably a likelihood
that there will be a whole series of new evidence introduced through the
backdoor, even though there was a prime facie provision against it.[57]
2.93
The joint carriers submission suggested that new
section 152DOA will be of limited benefit in speeding up the resolution of
access disputes. It forecast that the amendment will achieve the following
result:
... the parties will simply adduce every skerrick of evidence at
the ACCC arbitration stage, slowing down the process at the front end. This
has already occurred in the Local Carriage Service and Unbundled Local Loop
arbitrations currently afoot.[58]
2.94
Telstra thought that in relation to this
provision in the bill, the policy objective could be better expressed to permit
the Tribunal to admit new evidence only in circumstances where it would lead to
more expeditious outcomes.[59]
Stay of decisions
2.95
At present, a person who is aggrieved by a
decision of the Australian Competition Tribunal, may apply to the Federal Court
for an order of review in respect of the decision (section 5, Administrative
Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977). This review does not consider
whether the Tribunal made the correct decision on the merits of the case.
Rather, it involves ascertaining whether proper procedures have been followed
by the Tribunal, including consideration of all relevant matters and no matters
which are not relevant to the Tribunal’s task, giving proper weight to evidence
and allowing all parties adequate opportunity to present their case.
2.96
Item 20 of the bill inserts a new section 152DPA
into the Trade Practices Act, which prevents certain provisions of the Administrative
Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 from operating in relation to a
decision of the Australian Competition Tribunal under section 152DO of the
Trade Practices Act, after application for a review. The effect of this is to
prevent an order being made to suspend the operation of, or stay proceedings
under, the decision of the Tribunal.
2.97
Similarly, if a person applies to the Federal
Court under subsection 39B(1) of the Judiciary Act 1903 for a writ or
injunction in relation to a decision of the Tribunal under section 152DO of the
Trade Practices Act, the Court is to have no power to stay the decision pending
the finalisation of the application.
2.98
Item 23 provides that item 20 applies in
relation to applications for review, or applications for a writ or injunction,
that are made after commencement.
2.99
At present, if a person appeals to the Federal
Court from the decision of the Tribunal under section 152DQ, the Court can
issue orders in relation to that decision, pending the finalisation of the
application. Item 21 repeals section 152DR and substitutes a new section
specifying that the fact that an appeal is instituted, will not affect the
operation of the Tribunal decision or prevent action being taken to implement
that decision. In addition, the amended section prevents the Federal Court
from making orders staying or otherwise affecting the operation or
implementation of the decision pending finalisation of the appeal.
2.100
Another section of the Act (section 152DNB)
already provides that a party who receives an unfavourable determination from
the ACCC cannot have that decision stayed by the Federal Court. According to
the Explanatory Memorandum, the amendments in the bill are to ensure the
consistent operation of Part XIC in relation to applications and appeals in
respect of Commission and Tribunal decisions; and to ensure that Tribunal, as
well as Commission, decisions are not stayed by the Federal Court.[60]
2.101
Item 23 provides that item 21 applies in
relation to appeals that are made after commencement.
2.102
The Committee notes that the Senate Scrutiny of
Bills Committee raised concerns about new sections 152DPA and 152DR.[61] In its Alert Digest on the
bill, it considered that preventing the Federal Court from making an order
staying or otherwise affecting the operation or implementation of the
Tribunal’s decision is contrary to the normal practice when a judicial decision
is taken on appeal.
2.103
The Scrutiny of Bills Committee has sought the
Minister’s advice on issues relating to the amendment, and pending that advice,
has drawn Senators’ attention to the provisions in the bill.
2.104
The Explanatory Memorandum suggests that this
amendment, along with those at item 20, is a technical amendment which is
designed to achieve consistency with procedures applying to Tribunal reviews of
ACCC decisions (section 152DNB).
Response in submissions
2.105
Vodafone had concerns about the possible impact
of new section 152DR. It suggested that there could be irreparable
consequences for an access provider which must comply with a decision of the
Australian Competition Tribunal that is subsequently overturned by the Federal
Court:
This is because a decision by the Tribunal might require
fundamental changes to the operation of the access provider’s network and
impact on both its immediate and future capability to provide services to its
customers.[62]
2.106
In the event of a Tribunal decision being
overturned, Vodafone suggested that there needs to be some form of compensation
available to parties who are forced to comply with the decision of the
Tribunal:
If you are going to enforce what is effectively an interim
decision, then if the decision went the other way, through the appeal process,
there would need to be some assurance that for either the access provider or
the access seeker who has been disadvantaged there is some way of putting
things right. The only way to do that, if you are going to force a decision to
be implemented in the interim, is to allow them to claim back the losses that
they would have suffered. Our concern is that, particularly in this industry
where firms come and go, undertakings to damages by one of the parties may not
provide the other party with sufficient comfort. It is a finely balanced issue,
because there is a trade-off between the time taken to appeal a decision and a
party’s rights to be able to appeal.[63]
2.107
The Committee notes that the issue of
compensation raised by Vodafone mirrors the concerns of the Scrutiny of Bills
Committee in its Alert Digest.[64]
2.108
Vodafone advocated that item 21 be removed from
the bill, pending further consideration, because it has implications that go
beyond a simple streamlining of the dispute resolution process.[65]
Other issues
2.109
Other issues of substance relating to the
telecommunications access regime were raised in submissions and by witnesses
although they were not covered directly by amendments in the bill. It is
likely that these issues will be considered by the Department of
Communications, Information Technology and the Arts when it analyses the
Productivity Commission’s Final Report on Telecommunications Competition
Regulation. The issues included: abolishing the Australian Competition
Tribunal review of ACCC decisions; ministerial determination of the PSTN interconnect
price; and compulsory Undertakings.
Abolition of Australian Competition Tribunal review of Australian
Competition and Consumer Commission final determinations
2.110
When considering the amendments in the bill,
several submissions, including the ACCC, were of the view that item 19
(inserting new section 152DOA) will not go far enough in resolving the problems
of the protracted delays in the resolution of access disputes. They advocated
that the bill provides an opportunity to abolish reviews of ACCC final
determinations by the Australian Competition Tribunal (the Tribunal)
altogether.
2.111
The argument against a Tribunal review is that
it is a re-arbitration of the access dispute and as such, it adds further
delays, uncertainty and opportunities for regulatory gaming to the regime.
According to AAPT:
... it is our contention that the merits review is so much
available to gaming and it does not actually go to address any of the points of
substance. If there are points of substance in those arbitrations, we believe
we have plenty of ability to utilise existing administrative law processes to
get those addressed. We do not need a re-arbitration to get those matters
addressed.[66]
2.112
According to Primus:
... the real issue that Primus has with the merits review as it is
currently being conducted is that it ties up the parties’ resources—legal and
management and regulatory resources, in particular—and this is what has been
described as regulatory gaming. In other words, there is no obvious benefit to
rehearing the matter from a legal or forensic point of view. You are just
running the same arguments over again.[67]
2.113
Primus was also concerned about the intimidating
effect that merits review has on smaller access seekers:
... there is a concern that smaller access seekers will see that
even the relatively larger players are being taken to the tribunal and the
matter is being dragged out for another two years, from scratch. This seems to
have an intimidatory effect on smaller access seekers from even taking a matter
to the commission, because they know that, if they do, the likelihood is that
they are going to be dragged up before the tribunal as well.[68]
2.114
Professor Allan Fels, Chairman, ACCC, made the
point that although the telecommunications access regime is often referred to
as a ‘negotiate-arbitrate’ model, it is in fact a
‘negotiate-arbitrate-re-arbitrate’ model and that this was achieved by Telstra
lobbying in 1997 when the regime was introduced.[69] Unlike in normal
arbitrations:
Telstra and others have a right to a full rehearing, a full
rearbitration, by the Australian Competition Tribunal—that is, a completely new
de novo arbitration. That is unusual. Parties can raise new material, make
new submissions and engage new experts. They can even withhold information
from the first arbitration, saving it for the rearbitration. That mechanism of
full rearbitration maximises delay and uncertainty.[70]
2.115
The joint carriers submission outlined, by way
of illustration of the problems with the access regime, the history of the
process followed by the ACCC in determining the price for interconnection to
Telstra’s Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN).[71] The final determination made
by the ACCC in the related access disputes is currently before the Tribunal
following application by Telstra for a review. The joint carriers contended
that:
The ACCC has followed a thorough, rigorous and exhaustive
process in determining the PSTN interconnect rates over the FY 1998-2002
period. Telstra, through its appeal to the ACT, seeks to overturn the ACCC
decision, including extensive public and industry consultation and four years
of analysis since November 1997. Telstra is seeking to increase prices to
levels that are higher than the commercial prices that it negotiated when it
lodged its first Undertaking with the ACCC in November 1997.[72]
2.116
Further, the ACCC explained some of the
processes it went through to arrive at its final determination and why it took
the time it did:
There had to be complete modelling of Telstra’s network to try
to get at the costs and that had to be done independently. That essentially
took a while. We say it is for that very reason that we did that so thoroughly
and we did it in a public, consultative manner. Telstra had massive input and
other people, within the limits of commercial-in-confidence information, got to
comment on that. That is exactly why you do not then need to open all that up
to the possibility of it being repeated—and I mean literally repeated—in a
rearbitration where Telstra can come in and say, ‘We would prefer to use a
different model’.[73]
2.117
The joint carriers asserted that the uncertainty
caused by failure to have a final price determined means that it is nearly
impossible for competitive carriers to properly plan their pricing, investment
decisions and business operations.[74]
Because Telstra is also seeking to backdate charges previously paid by some
carriers, to higher rates proposed in its application to the Tribunal,[75] companies who continue to
trade and interconnect with Telstra are forced to carry significant potential
liabilities on their balance sheets:[76]
... there is a need at least to annotate the accounts to the
extent that there is a matter still outstanding. It is a matter for every
individual firm as to how much they quantify that as a contingent liability and
how they deal with it, but it is certainly a matter that the companies have to
have regard to.[77]
2.118
According to the ACCC, the Tribunal review of
the PSTN dispute appears unlikely to be finalised before the second half of
2002, which would be up to five years after the original service declaration.[78] In addition, Telstra has
indicated its intention to exercise its right of Tribunal review for other key
services, even though the ACCC has yet to finalise its determinations on these
services.[79]
2.119
The ACCC attributed many of the problems of the
access regime with the re-hearing of disputes by the Tribunal:
The access regime established under Part XIC of the Act sought
to encourage commercial resolution of access issues, with arbitration of terms
and conditions of access by the ACCC intended as a last resort. However, these
objectives are being frustrated by the length of time to finalise matters, and
the corresponding uncertainty this causes for industry. The complete
re-hearing of arbitral decisions is, in the ACCC’s view, a major cause of this
delay and undermines the intention of the regime that the regulatory agency to
be approached as a matter of last resort.[80]
2.120
The joint carriers argued that it is not only
the delays and ongoing uncertainty from a review of the decision which is the
problem, but that the Tribunal is not as well equipped as the ACCC to consider
the issues.[81]
The Tribunal is constituted by a Federal Court judge, as a presiding member,
and two senior members drawn from a number of senior members who are appointed
by the Government, usually on the basis of their expertise in competition
matters generally. The members of the Tribunal do not need to have, and are
not likely to have, a specific expertise in telecommunications access pricing
issues. Further, the Tribunal has no institutionalised knowledge to draw on,
unlike the ACCC. There is no secretariat or established resources from which
to obtain advice and assistance.
2.121
Although section 43B of the Act provides for the
employment of consultants to perform services for the Tribunal, and subsection
152DO(5) allows the Tribunal to request from the ACCC information, other
assistance and the making of reports, Professor Fels suggested that it depends
upon the Tribunal president whether these powers are used:
The tribunal consists simply of three people who do not have a
backup staff. Mr Justice Lockhart, the previous president of the
tribunal—I have not discussed it with the present one—was not keen on having
staff. In any case, even if they wanted it, you would have to have extensive
resourcing.[82]
2.122
Telstra commented on the assertions made about
the ability of the Tribunal to conduct these reviews as follows:
Some parties have suggested that the Tribunal does not have the
skills or experience to hear such cases. I do not know how much credence the
Committee confers on that, but it strikes me as being a somewhat remarkable
allegation to make, given that the Tribunal’s members are drawn from economics
and trade practices backgrounds. In this particular case, they comprise a
professor of economics, a former head of Austel, which was the industry body in
the 1990s up to 1997, and a Federal Court judge with broad experience in trade
practices and competition law matters.[83]
2.123
The joint carriers informed the Committee that
the setting of interconnect prices is a complex, resource intensive, and highly
specialised area in which the ACCC has built up considerable expertise. In the
case of the Telstra PSTN review, it will be the first time the Tribunal has
considered telecommunications pricing of access decisions and there are no
prior decisions of the Tribunal to assist in determining the way to proceed or
the principles to apply.
2.124
The Tribunal review is a re-arbitration of the
access dispute and not simply a review of the original ACCC decision for errors
of fact and/or law. The joint carriers raised the question as to the point of
having two bodies undertaking identical tasks, when those tasks are complex and
lengthy, in a regulatory environment where relatively quick decisions are
required.[84]
At the public hearing this point came in for some lengthy discussion between
the Committee and the Department as the Committee tried to get a clearer
understanding of why the Government was not removing Tribunal review from the
access regime. The Department referred the Committee to debate which took
place when the access regime was established and later provided the following
arguments in relation to merits review:
On the one hand, arguments supporting its
abolition are based on:
- the significant public interest in taking
rapid action to maintain investor confidence in the market;
- the extensive nature of the inquiry processes and independent
expertise of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC); and
- the adversarial and legalistic nature of an Australian
Competition Tribunal (ACT), compared to an ACCC arbitration that reflects the
long term interests of end users as well as the views and submissions of the
parties to the arbitration.
- On the other hand, merits review was originally
included in the ‘check and balances’ of the original 1997 telecommunications
access regime because:
- it is normal that administrative decisions
involving significant rights of parties are subject to merits review (a key
issue routinely raised by the Senate Scrutiny of Bill Committee);
- it promotes rigour and accuracy in
decision-making by the original decision-maker;
- ACCC determinations about the long term
interests of end users involves the exercise of significant discretions; and
- other major decisions involving discretions of
the ACCC are reviewable, including decisions made under s50 in relation to
mergers, Part IV and Part IIIA of the Trade Practices Act 1974. [85]
2.125
The Committee understands that the bill is
essentially a package of ‘efficiency reforms’ to the existing arrangements.
More fundamental proposals to make significant changes to the
telecommunications access regime might be more appropriately considered in the
context of the Productivity Commission’s final report into Telecommunications
Competition Regulation, due to be provided to the Government in late September
2001.
2.126
In a note to their submission, the joint
carriers suggested that if it was thought that the Tribunal is superior to the
ACCC in making decisions on access pricing matters, then Part XIC
arbitrations should proceed immediately to be determined by the Tribunal,
by-passing the ACCC altogether, as there is no need for two separate processes
to make a decision on the same access pricing dispute.[86] At the public hearing, this
idea was put to the ACCC. Professor Fels was of the view that:
... that would be another option if you want to have legal style
hearings headed by a Federal Court judge with QCs doing the arbitration, but
then there would be the question of where they get their expertise from.
Personally, ... I believe that, when you get into complex pricing matters, courts
and tribunals with legal style procedures have extreme difficulty because of
the high technical component in decisions that are necessary about pricing.
The Tribunal simply does not have it. The Tribunal consists simply of three
people who do not have a backup staff.[87]
2.127
Again, it is noted that ACCC Chairman Professor
Fels advised the Committee that he had offered expert staff to advise the
Tribunal but this offer was rejected.[88]
2.128
The ACCC informed the Committee that the nature
of the re-arbitration can also cause delays. It stated that the process for
the PSTN origination and termination review has involved greater legal
representation, and greater diversion onto issues such as legal standing. In
addition:
It also does not appear to be able to replicate processes
undertaken by the ACCC, such as the public consultation process on pricing
principles that accompanies many arbitrations.[89]
2.129
The ACCC has compared the current arbitral
review provisions of the telecommunications access regime with other review
rights and found that it is unusual for a commercial arbitration to be
completely re-heard by another body. Further, it provided research into the
review of regulatory decisions in Australia and overseas showing that it is not
the norm for there to be provisions providing for a full re-hearing on the
merits by an appeals body of an access pricing decision.[90] Telstra, however, disputed
these conclusions.[91]
2.130
In addition, the ACCC noted that the
Administrative Review Council’s guidelines on what Commonwealth decisions
should be subject to merits review, acknowledge that certain factors may
justify excluding a complete re-hearing of the matter. The guidelines provide
an exception for decisions involving extensive inquiry processes, and the ACCC
believed that the telecommunications access arbitration process falls within
the scope of this extension, notwithstanding the argument of Telstra to the
contrary.[92]
2.131
Despite witnesses advocating the repeal of
reviews by the Tribunal, this view was by no means unanimous amongst carriers.
Vodafone was supportive of the appeals process and satisfied with the
amendments in the bill to limit evidence to which the Tribunal can have regard.[93] It considered that there is a
balance to be achieved between making quick decisions and in making good
decisions:
Our concern is that, if you move too far towards making quick
decisions compared with good decisions, the industry will actually be impacted
more going into the future.[94]
2.132
Vodafone was of the view that the Tribunal
review provisions are an integral part of the telecommunications specific
access regime:
... if you are going to have specific regulation that applies
solely to telecommunications companies and private investors like Vodafone, we
believe that the enhanced appeal rights or review process are actually an
important part of that entire framework.[95]
2.133
Telstra suggested that the motives behind the
joint carriers call for fundamental change to the regulatory regime is
suspicious:
[The bill] addresses the most immediate problems which are
obvious to the industry and which were plain at our industry forum, but it does
not ask the Senate to prematurely overhaul the entire regulatory regime in the
days that are left. Such an approach would be, to borrow the word of Senator
Alston, ‘fundamentalist’. This fundamentalist approach is, nonetheless,
recommended to you by some of Telstra’s competitors, perhaps at the urging of
their parent companies. Their calls for change to the regulatory regime are
well beyond the intent of this bill and, before the Parliament can see the
Productivity Commission’s report, which is due next week, are suspicious, to
say the least. One could perhaps conclude that their eagerness to pre-empt the
Productivity Commission’s report is an attempt to snatch a market advantage
before the Commission can expose their arguments as dubious and commercially
self-motivated.[96]
2.134
The Productivity Commission, in its draft
report, did not advocate that Tribunal reviews of final determinations be
removed from the regime:
... it could be argued that the care taken by the ACCC to set
efficient terms and conditions could be reduced if there were no vehicle for
full review of final determinations. Moreover, while the review process takes
time, it does not prevent effective interconnection in the meantime given that
the interim determination applies. The [Productivity] Commission considers
that it is appropriate to retain provisions that allow a full merit review of
final determinations by the Australian Competition Tribunal.[97]
2.135
However, the Committee notes that a party who is
unhappy with an ACCC final determination retains rights to appeal the ACCC
decision on matters of law, to the Federal Court. This right of judicial
review ensures accountability and good decision-making by the ACCC. Judicial
review is potentially wide ranging, having regard to such issues as proper
procedure, correct interpretation and application of law, procedural fairness
and unreasonableness.[98]
2.136
Telstra argued that the existence of merits
reviews from administrative decisions is based on the universally accepted
principle that natural justice or fairness requires there to be an impartial
and complete review of regulatory decisions. Telstra suggested that it would
be at odds with the approach taken internationally, for Australia to abolish
merits review under the administrative decision making processes by which the
ACCC makes final determinations.[99]
2.137
The Committee finds the arguments in favour of
removing Tribunal re-arbitrations of ACCC final determinations from the
telecommunications access regime to be worthy of further consideration.
However, the Committee is aware that this option was considered, but rejected
when the bill was framed:
Particularly given the broader government policy implications,
it is not proposed to proceed with this option at this time.[100]
2.138
The Department informed the Committee that
merits review was an important feature of the debate back in 1997 when the
telecommunications access regime was introduced. It argued that the final
determination of the ACCC:
... is a decision by an administrative decision maker which has a
very significant impact on the parties and is arguably in the public interest,
in the sense that the ACCC is being asked to make judgments about matters which
really go to public interest type discretions—the long-term interest of end
users is the key one they use.[101]
2.139
When further pressed about why the Tribunal
review should remain, the Department advised the Committee that it should be
viewed in the following context:
... this is an on-balance judgment about whether or not you think
it is appropriate to have scrutiny of the kinds of decisions the ACCC makes,
given the breadth of discretion that is involved because it is a decision of an
administrative character and so on. Also, the reason why the government in
this package has not taken that issue on is that it is a fundamental element of
the regime. I do not think the Minister has necessarily ruled out looking at
that issue again in the future, but he has basically said that at the moment he
does not think it is appropriate to move ahead with this. I think the Minister
would regard this package as being effectively an efficiency package of reforms
designed to hopefully streamline the existing regime without making fundamental
changes at this stage prior to the Productivity Commission report coming out.[102]
2.140
Despite the concern of the telecommunications
industry in relation to the current appeal to the Tribunal about the PSTN
interconnect price the Committee accepts the Department’s reasoning that this
bill is not the appropriate means for changing a fundamental element of the
regime in the way advocated by submissions to the inquiry.
The need for Parliament or the Minister to act to set the PSTN interconnect
price
2.141
As a corollary to the abolition of Tribunal
reviews, some submissions advocated that in relation to the PSTN interconnect
dispute which is currently before the Tribunal for review, the Minister should
issue a pricing determination to set the PSTN price based on the ACCC findings,
or alternatively, the price should be set in the bill.
2.142
Submissions argued that the PSTN Terminating and
Originating Access Service is the most fundamental of the access services under
the access regime.[103]
It is through the acquisition of this service that other telecommunications
network service providers can interconnect with the Telstra network.
Consequently, it is of vital importance to any competitor offering long
distance telephone calls or building their own local network service. In
addition, the principles applied in determining access to the service, will
affect access to other declared services across the regime:[104]
... things like the pricing of the unconditional local loop
service, which is an essential input to digital subscriber line technology and
to the ability to provide broadband Internet access to a lot of homes in
Australia. That is a set of decisions that is going to effectively sit in a
queue behind whatever happens on PSTN pricing. So we have uncertainty
affecting not only interconnection rates of PSTN but the development of new
services in Australia.[105]
2.143
The joint carriers suggested that the
determination of PSTN interconnect has been the first test of the access regime
and as a result, the regime has been found wanting:
Not only has it been the first issue but it is the most
important interconnect issue. It is the building block of a competitive
telecommunications environment. Four years have passed since liberalisation of
the market, and the PSTN interconnect price has not been set. It looks as
though we have at least two years to wait until the price is set. This delay
is unacceptable.[106]
2.144
The PSTN access disputes were notified to the
ACCC by AAPT on 14 December 1998 and by Primus on 5 March 1999. Since that
time, the ACCC conducted the arbitration process (with a suspension of active
steps in the arbitrations to consider Telstra’s second access Undertaking
between 24 September 1999 and 10 July 2000) and published its final
determinations in September 2000. Telstra then applied to the Australian
Competition Tribunal for a complete re-hearing of the ACCC’s determinations.
2.145
The joint carriers submission stated that, based
on an article in the Australian Financial Review, Telstra was seeking
from the Tribunal a price of 3.6 cents per minute for access to its PSTN.[107] According to the joint
carriers, this would be an increase on the ACCC rates of 200 per cent.
However, at the public hearing, Telstra denied that it was seeking this price.[108]
2.146
Further, the joint carriers contended that the
manner in which Telstra has attempted to appeal the ACCC decision has been
deliberately designed to exert maximum delay and maximum pressure on others.[109] They asserted that if
Telstra was concerned with the ACCC’s methodology, it could have appealed the
ACCC’s decisions when its two Undertakings on the PSTN interconnect were
rejected:
Instead, they appealed arbitration decisions against two of the
smaller players, AAPT and Primus, because they thought that, if they could
establish a precedent against two smaller carriers that were not as well
resourced, that would give them the maximum chance of winning. They did that
in October 2000. So there was a year and a half when they did not appeal when
the ACCC’s decisions were perfectly transparent to them.[110]
2.147
Mr Havyatt from AAPT contended that:
... if the access providers are grossly concerned about the need
for review, they would be well advised to use the pathway of an access undertaking
to get access to review and that what should be left to arbitration are
relatively minor and simple issues that should not need the process of review.[111]
2.148
In its evidence to the Committee, Telstra argued
that its Tribunal review was launched in accordance with legal rights conferred
by the Parliament:
Telstra has appealed the ACCC’s decision on pricing in this case
because we believe the regulator is wrong. In particular, we believe, based on
legal and economic review and also on the effect of the decision on our ability
to invest going forward, that the ACCC has failed to adequately take into
account the true costs of operating large infrastructure in a country as large
and thinly populated as Australia. As a result, we believe the decision does provide
our competitors with access below their true and efficient costs. If we are
right in this and if this does inhibit us going forward, the result is not only
that we cannot recover our costs but that we cannot easily afford to invest in
infrastructure.[112]
2.149
Further, Telstra suggested that it is pursuing
the appeal because of the precedent that flows through into asset valuation and
pricing methodology going forward. It considered that this is a necessary path
that the industry has to go down to achieve certainty.[113]
2.150
The joint carriers argued that the consequences
for the telecommunications industry should Telstra succeed in its appeal to the
Australian Competition Tribunal are dire.[114]
Interconnect prices would then be higher than they were in 1997 and the gains
of the last four years from lower international telephony, national long
distance, and fixed to mobile phones will be undone. Carriers and service
providers will go out of business resulting in re-monopolisation of the copper
network and an increase in Telstra’s relative share of industry profits from 89
per cent to over 95 per cent.
2.151
However, Telstra submitted that:
... the very reason that [the] protagonists are putting these
matters forward at this time is that they feel that the court will find that the
regulated prices being charged are not truly in the interests of end users.
Were they to think otherwise they would have nothing to fear from this
process. Ensuring prices that support investment is as important to Australian
consumers as it is to Telstra’s two million shareholders. A failure to do so
will inevitably compromise and ultimately undermine Telstra’s ability to
provide the services the community demands and can legitimately expect.[115]
2.152
Under section 152CH of the Trade Practices Act,
the Minister has the power to make a Ministerial pricing determination which
sets out principles dealing with price-related terms and conditions relating to
the standard access obligations. Such a determination is a disallowable
instrument. The Minister has never exercised his power under this section of
the Act but Optus and the joint carriers recommended that he do so now in
relation to PSTN interconnect prices.[116]
They advocated that the price be set based on the ACCC’s thorough consideration
of the issues.[117]
What we are arguing here today is that specific action is needed
on the PSTN interconnect issue. The Minister has the power under the act to
set the price, and we think that the broader interest requires him to exercise
that right or for the parliament to do so.[118]
2.153
The joint carriers argued that the fact that the
Minister’s power exists, demonstrates Parliament’s intention that the Minister
should retain a degree of residual power in relation to pricing and access
issues. They submitted that this is appropriate in order for determinations to
be made in the broader public interest, in exceptional circumstances and that
such a point has been reached in relation to PSTN interconnect dispute. They
suggested that the current process has essentially failed, judged against
Parliament’s original intentions. Without intervention, instability and
uncertainty in the industry will continue, with consequent harm to consumer
welfare.[119]
2.154
However, the Productivity Commission’s draft
report suggests that the Minister’s power in this respect:
... is largely one that carried over from the prior regulatory
regime for telecommunications, in which prescriptive pricing was a feature.[120]
2.155
Further, the Productivity Commission recommended
the removal from the Trade Practices Act of the discretion for Ministerial
pricing determinations on the following grounds:
... [it] fails to meet good design criteria, since there is no
specified requirement for consultation or public disclosure of reasons for any
decision, nor any mechanisms — other than Parliament itself — to challenge such
determinations. Nor is it clear why this single matter — access pricing —
should be subject to discretionary Ministerial intervention, when the ACCC
already performs this function as part of arbitrations.[121]
2.156
The ACCC informed the Committee that it does not
generally support price setting by the Minister:
I am a bit concerned that the Minister acquires that power:
generally ministers then end up being lobbied by everyone. The whole point of
having independent bodies is to remove ministers and governments from having to
get caught up in the detail of particular prices that are the subject of
contention between interest groups. So in broad principle I would prefer to
see these sorts of decisions being made by regulators, with certain rights of
appeal to courts.[122]
2.157
As an alternative to the Minister exercising his
power under section 152CH, the joint carriers suggested that the bill itself be
amended to set the rate:[123]
The time has come for the Minister to exercise the power that
the Act grants to him to set the price; alternatively, this Committee should
recommend that the current bill be amended to set the PSTN interconnect price
based on the ACCC’s thorough consideration of the issues.[124]
2.158
Whilst the Committee acknowledges the level of
concern over Tribunal reviews and the dispute over the PSTN interconnect price,
it recognises too that this bill is not the mechanism through which fundamental
changes to the telecommunications access regime should be made. Further, the
Committee considers that it would be inappropriate for it to recommend such
actions as those requested by the joint carriers in isolation from a complete
review of the regime and prior to the release of the Productivity Commission’s
final report.
Compulsory Undertakings in certain circumstances
2.159
In its submission, the ACCC discussed an
additional amendment which it considered should be added to the bill to improve
the access regime.[125]
It suggested that it be allowed to impose compulsory Undertakings in relation
to some services.
2.160
An access Undertaking (section 152BS of the Act)
is, in essence, a document in which the carrier/carriage service provider
states that it will do, or refrain from doing, certain things in relation to a
declared service. This is set out in the terms and conditions of the
Undertaking.
2.161
Currently, Part XIC of the Act provides for
voluntary access Undertakings from access providers, which the ACCC must apply
in a relevant arbitration. While intended to provide more flexibility to
access seekers and reduce their exposure to arbitral determinations, voluntary
Undertakings have, in practice, provided access providers with a further
ability to delay access to services. The ACCC suggested that this is because
of the optional nature of the Undertaking, which encourages access providers to
submit unreasonable Undertakings. This has the effect of delaying other
regulatory processes, including arbitrations.
2.162
Since the introduction of Part XIC of the Act,
the ACCC has received four sets of Undertakings. All of the Undertakings were
lodged by Telstra. Each of the Undertakings specified the terms and conditions
on which Telstra was prepared to comply with its standard access obligations in
respect of the relevant service but all four were not accepted by the ACCC.
2.163
A possible amendment to the Act would allow the
ACCC, in limited cases, to require a carrier or carriage service provider to
submit an access Undertaking in relation to a declared service where it is in
the long-term interests of end-users. In the event that the carrier or
carriage service provider fails to comply with the direction, or the ACCC
rejects the access Undertaking proposed by the carrier or carriage service
provider, the ACCC may, after conducting a public consultation process, draft
and accept an access Undertaking with which the carrier or carriage service
provider must comply, provided that the conditions in subsection 152BV(2) are
satisfied.[126]
2.164
The ACCC submitted that amendments in the bill
which will introduce multilateral arbitration, information sharing and the
publication of determinations, will assist in expediting the arbitral process,
and somewhat increase the level of information available to the industry.
However, they still mean that bilateral arbitrations must occur for terms and conditions
that are essentially multilateral:
... the problem that we are dealing with here is that a lot of the
time you are dealing with fairly simple generic services that Telstra provides
to a whole range of other carriers, basic interconnections—so many cents per
minute to interconnect with Telstra’s network or so many cents per minute to
connect to the mobile network—or at what price Telstra sells local calls at a
wholesale rate to other people.
It has turned out that there is no particular reason why the
price that Telstra charges for each of these services should differ between
carriers. There might be some volume discounts but basically you are just
dealing with a simple service. ... We are saying that in these cases the price
should get set across the range of all comers.[127]
2.165
The ACCC submitted that a compulsory Undertaking
would provide additional benefits by promoting industry self-regulation and
ensuring that issues that are of general concern to the industry are dealt with
on a transparent basis. It would therefore not only lead to more timely
outcomes, but promote greater certainty for interconnection pricing:
In the ACCC’s view, such a provision would have provided an
efficient mechanism for settling the access price for the Domestic PSTN
Originating and Terminating Services where the ACCC has both performed an
extensive assessment of two undertakings proposed by Telstra and conducted a
number of bilateral arbitrations in relation to the services. It would also
have resulted in more expeditious outcomes in obtaining fair and reasonable
conditions for access to the Unconditioned Local Loop service. [128]
2.166
The Committee suggests that the Government
consider this amendment when it conducts its review of the Productivity
Commission report.
Conclusion
2.167
In the light of the pending Productivity
Commission report on Telecommunications Competition Regulation, the Committee
concludes that the bill should be passed by the Senate. The Committee urges
the Government to consider the issues raised with respect to merits review
which are more fundamental to the regime in association with its response to
the Productivity Commission report.
Recommendation
The Committee recommends that the bill be passed without
amendment.
________________________
Senator Alan Eggleston
Chair
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