The market mechanism in reality and myth: corporate business overlordship of small business.
Jones, Evan
Small business activity in Australia is perennially dogged by
market structures operating to the benefit of larger corporations.
Unfortunately, the small business-corporate interaction is little
understood because it is little publicised--ignored in academia and
marginalised in the media. Worse, the arena is subject to strategic
misrepresentation by spokespeople for corporate interests. This
misrepresentation has been facilitated by a significant anomaly: the key
economic concept of 'the market', though presumed to be well
understood by those who use it, is vacuous.
The Market: Ideal, but What is It?
The 'free market' system is the best form of
socio-economic organisation ever devised by humankind, according to the
pundits. Moreover, the phenomenon that gives the free market its
supremacy is competition. And we all know what the free market is.
Except we don't; likewise for competition.
The 'market' as an abstraction is suggestive but almost
entirely without substance. To use the word productively, we have to add
substance. Consider 'flea' markets for secondhand goods,
farmers' markets, the stock market, wholesale and retail fruit and
vegetable markets, the wheat market(s), the credit market(s), the labour
market(s), and so on. These are institutions of vastly different
character. A particular market is constituted and delineated by its
particular rules and its institutional detail, dictating the functioning
and terms of interaction of sellers and buyers.
Market rules are not impersonal or happenstance but have been
consciously and strategically established, over particular spaces. They
have been modified over time with experience of their operation. But who
sets these rules? The rules privilege some social groups over others
--often precisely their intention. Some rules are relatively benign--for
example, the parameters of flea markets. For other markets the rules
entrench a power relationship between social groups. (1)
The evolution of market structures and the attendant rules of
exchange with the development of capitalism highlight a shifting balance
of forces --from the restrictions on 'forestalling, regrating and
engrossing' in late mediaeval markets, localised and personalised,
to the transcendence of locality (through long term
'globalisation') which facilitates the dominance of the most
powerful under the misleading rubrics of being impersonal and freer
(Lie, 1993).
But here is the curiosity. The rules by which most markets operate
are generally opaque. Economists, the discipline for whom the concept is
supposedly a specialty, systematically eschew an examination of the
constitution of markets. (2) Worse, there are forces devoted
strategically to the secretion or the fictionalisation of the rules that
constitute particular markets.
One is reminded of the motif of Downyflake Donuts, iconic Melbourne
outlet, circa 1950s: "As you wander on through life brother /
Whatever be your goal / Keep your eye upon the donut / And not upon the
hole." Originally devised as a creed of optimism, it provides a
useful metaphor for the pursuit of understanding. Figuratively, the hole
has been privileged over the doughnut; ignorance is fostered as a matter
of principle.
Competition: the Market Mechanism's Elusive Guardian Angel
Before elaborating on conflicts over the constitution and
representation of markets, a preliminary discussion is necessary on the
elusive concept of 'competition'. In 1968, James McNulty wrote: "There is probably no concept in all of economics that is at
once more fundamental and pervasive, yet less satisfactorily developed,
than the concept of competition" (McNulty, 1968). Over 40 years
later, the state of academic discourse is, if anything, worse. (3)
The road to enlightenment has been dramatically impeded by the
post-1870 era of dominance of Neoclassical economics and its attachment
(for analytical simplicity and ideological purity) to 'perfect
competition', a state in which innumerable firms have driven a
particular product's price to equality with its marginal cost of
production, and above-subsistence levels of profit eliminated. In the
Marshallian Neoclassical tradition there is a competitive process
leading to the ideal endpoint, but it is off-stage. In the purist Walrasian Neoclassical tradition there is merely a general equilibrium state.
With the high-status theorists 'off with the fairies', it
has been left to those concerned with the construction of competition
regulatory regimes (mostly Institutionalist and 'industrial
organisation' economists and the legal profession in various
guises--academic, commercial, judicial) to develop pragmatic definitions
and regulatory rules, the evolution of which has been poorly charted.
The 'practitioners' in turn have differed among
themselves, generating the debate in which competition is defined not a
priori but as a by-product of the attempted establishment of a
functional regulation framework. Traditional Institutionalist and
industrial organisation economists, plus some regulatory lawyers, have
had sympathy for the petty bourgeois (in the US, 'republican')
vision, in which business size per se is a threat to market integrity.
The tension arises with the rise in scale facilitated by the joint-stock
corporation, which potentially spawns economies and lower prices. Yet
there exists the seemingly inevitable growth of the representative
corporation beyond technical and logistic necessity. The practical
regulatory imperative is to impede this trajectory where it is likely to
result in the acquisition of 'market power', where there is no
compensating public benefit (i.e. regulatory attention to market
structure); if having failed in the first ambition, to inhibit the
'unfair' taking advantage of that power (i.e. regulatory
attention to market conduct). The criteria for determining an
appropriate market structure (especially in the face of a prospective
takeover) are not straightforward but elaborate and problematic on the
margin (c/f Australian Competition & Consumer Commission, 2008b). To
distinguish between conduct that is 'unfair' and that which is
legitimate is also problematic.
Those sympathetic to corporate imperatives have pushed for more
accommodating regulatory structures. This grouping naturally includes
big business lobbies--for example, the American Chamber of Commerce and
the Business Council of Australia. It also includes the bulk of the
commercial legal profession, which draws its revenue from corporate
coffers. The Law Council of Australia has been assiduous in lobbying for
corporate capital (Jones, 2007b).
Thus the differences hinge on the attitudes of the various players
towards the perils/bounties of the large corporation. The substantial
ambiguities associated with the determination of appropriate
deliberative rules for both structure and conduct enhances the
opportunities for differences of opinion.
The pro-corporate camp has been greatly strengthened by the
development in the 1950s and subsequent influence of the 'Chicago
School' (Jones, 2010). For the Chicago School, the corporation,
with the presumption of a monopoly of efficiency, is the last word in
satisfying social demands on the market mechanism. The Chicago School
was complemented in the early 1980s by the Contestability School, for
which the absence of market entry barriers is the fundamental force for
competition. From these perspectives, a couple of firms (or even one)
can satisfy social objectives as long as their market presence is
'contestable'.
This benign treatment of big capital by the Chicago and
Contestability Schools has had substantial influence on the culture
underpinning US antitrust policy. The mentality has also filtered
dangerously into Australian policy culture. It is implicit in both the
Campbell Report (Committee of Inquiry into the Australian Financial
System, 1981), recommending comprehensive financial deregulation, and
the Hilmer Report (Independent Committee of Inquiry into Competition
Policy in Australia, 1993), recommending a comprehensive competition
regime for all economic activity and public services in Australia. Both
reports place competition at the centre of their ideal worlds, decline
to define what they mean but hint that a marketplace dominated by large
corporations would gain their approval. Thus the two most important
economic inquiry reports in the last forty years are built on deception.
The leverage of the pro-corporate camp is further manifest in the
fact that the competition regulator, the Australian Competition &
Consumer Commission, has (notably under the 2003-11 chairmanship of
Graeme Samuel) betrayed the spirit and letter of the Trade Practices Act
in kowtowing to corporate imperatives. This inaction is especially
reflected in the tolerance of takeovers (with the attendant acquired
market power) in the retail sector by Coles and Woolworths and in the
banking sector resulting in the current dominance of the 'Big
4' (Jones, 2006; Jones, 2009b).
From the dawn of the Neoclassical era and since,
'competition' has been analysed predominantly from an industry
sectoral perspective. By contrast, Classical economics analysed
competition as a system-wide phenomenon, a vehicle for the equalisation
of profit rates across the economy (Eatwell, 2008). Mobility of capital
is the crucial mechanism. The Classical economics tradition reached its
fruition in Marx, for whom "competition is synonymous with the
generalisation of capitalist relations of production" (ibid.).
Capital is thus a revolutionary agent that "eliminates all the
legal and extra-economic impediments to its freedom of movement in the
different spheres of production" (ibid.). Moreover, the
concentration and centralisation of capital is an integral dimension of
this process.
In Marxian hands, 'competition' does not carry the
post-Classical presumption of social benevolence. Although Marx's
orientation was analytical, and his ideological commitment
post-capitalist, one may draw from it a 'moral economy'
perspective. (4) From that latter perspective, the
'competition' that is preferred is of a highly regulated
character and is conspicuously concerned to inhibit the acquisition and
use of power by private capital. The fight over market rules outlined
below is to be understood in that light.
Corporate Capital versus Small Business: a Case Study in Conflict
over Market Forms
The historic fight over market forms (c/f Lie, ibid.) reflects
basic conflicts over fundamental issues: what kind of socio-economic
system will predominate (and dictate our lives)? The 19th Century in
some white settler societies (the USA and Australia) provides case
studies in such fundamental conflicts--in particular, over a neo-serfdom
(indentured labour), petty commodity production (own labour) and
capitalism (wage labour). In the US, the conflict erupted into a bloody
civil war; the rest of the Century witnessed ongoing conflict between
the victorious coalition partners (including wage labour). The drawn-out
fight between petty commodity populism and corporate capital (c/f
Ritter, 1997), a conflict of enormous significance for the trajectory of
the American socio-economic system, is redolent of the story outlined
below.
In Australia, the fight between big and small capital to establish
a commercial regime that entrenches their particular interests is
conveniently explored through the prism of the history of trade
practices legislation. Big business resented the belated significant
legislation, the 1974 Trade Practices Act, and moved immediately to
undermine it. (5) The Act is a crucial site for key 'rules'
that underpin the market in Australia. Of special importance is s.46
(misuse of market power, originally 'monopolisation'), and the
subsequently legislated sub-sections of s.51 (unconscionable conduct).
(6)
From the viewpoint of corporate capital and its ideologues, s.46
should not exist. But corporate capital has possibly a preferred
alternative--a formal statute heralding fair play but one reduced to
inoperability. The one notable success of s.46 was a 1989 High Court
judgement against steel monopoly BHP for refusing to supply Y-bar to
Queensland Wire for the manufacture of fence posts (Queensland Wire
Industries v Broken Hill Pty, 1989). (7) Big capital had its revenge in
Boral v Australian Competition & Consumer Commission (2003) when a
High Court majority declared that Boral's actions, in initiating
fierce price cutting following the early 1990s recession, did not breach
s.46. It is a mere coincidence that the robust defence of Boral's
practices was handed down by Chief Justice Murray Gleeson, in 1989
senior counsel in BHP's defence against Queensland Wire. (8)
Coinciding with the Boral decision, the Dawson Report on
'reforming' trade practices regulation appeared (Trade
Practices Act Review Committee, 2003). The reign of Allan Fels as ACCC chairman (1991-2003) was resented by corporate business, especially with
respect to Fels' often hard line against takeovers and mergers.
Treasurer Peter Costello was lobbied to liberate takeover regulation
(Davey, 2003), and to ensure that Fels' replacement would be more
business-friendly. In October 2001 Costello duly appointed ex High Court
judge Daryl Dawson as head of a review committee, which delivered a
proposed takeover regime effectively bypassing the ACCC. (9) The small
business community was appalled by the bias transparent in the Dawson
Report; and a Senate inquiry was established to examine what Dawson had
been instructed to ignore (Senate Economics Committee, 2004). (10)
A political stalemate ensued. Costello then attempted to legislate
the Dawson provisions while ignoring the Senate Report. Small business
dug in its collective heels. This is the backdrop to the subsequent
propaganda onslaught by corporate business and its spokespersons that is
the dominant focus of this article. Before the character of this
onslaught is outlined, it is desirable to summarise the relations
between corporate and petty bourgeois capital ('small & medium
enterprises', or SMEs).
Real World Market Forms Facing Small Business
An inquiry established by the Fraser Coalition Government in 1978
(Trade Practices Consultative Committee, 1979) eventually led to a
formal strengthening of s.46 under a Labor-initiated 1986 amendment. The
test threshold was lowered from a 'corporation that is in a
position substantially to control a market' to a 'corporation
that has a substantial degree of power in a market'.
The Business Council of Australia, then only three years young,
attempted to counter this move with a diversionary claim that the
BCA's membership and SMEs were all just one big happy family, in
which 'constructive interdependence' prevailed (Business
Council of Australia, 1986). In 2004, in the context of ALP Opposition
leader Mark Latham expressing support for pro-SME measures, then
Wesfarmers' CEO Michael Chaney claimed "The success of many
small businesses depends on the strong performance by large
business" (11) (Hanrahan, 2004).
On the contrary. The major industry sectors in which such SMEs
operate are characterised by market forms of structured exploitation,
rooted in asymmetric power (Jones, 2005; 2006; 2009a). These sectors
include: shopping centre tenancies (cross-subsidisation of the corporate
'anchor tenants'; insecurity of tenure), franchises
(master-servant relationship), suppliers to corporate processors or
retailers, and bank borrowing (engineered defaults; unfettered
corruption). The structured exploitation is often embedded in the
contracts, some of which are innately unconscionable. More, corporates
can break contracts with SMEs without retribution.
These relationships are rarely documented or acknowledged. (12) The
fact that this reality is veiled provides a convenient starting point
for the propaganda warfare whenever the fragmented small business lobby
groups attempt to highlight their memberships' situation.
The Big Business Version of the Appropriate Market Form
The central fiction of corporate business is that a competitive
market requires big business as the natural player, an axiom that merely
needs to be stated to be held as true. The more highly concentrated the
industry the better. (13) Big business is presumed to be synonymous with
the drive to efficiency. In this presumption it is implicit that
efficiency is achieved via greater scale/scope (in turn achieved only
via honourable means) and/or corporate managerial farsightedness.
Greater efficiency and (long- term) lower prices are two sides of the
same coin. The consumer is the king of the market and the corporation is
its loyal servant.
From Ray Steinwall, sometime academic lawyer (Steinwall, 2004):
Whether or not the Senate has realised [re the post-Dawson 2003
Senate Economics Committee Inquiry], it had embarked on a new
competition philosophy, one that is as keen to embrace a market of
many competitors as it is the competitive process itself.
On the contrary; the philosophy that 'embraces a market of
many competitors' is embodied in a centuries-old 'moral
economy' or 'populist' antagonism to business monoliths,
a vision simplified and purified in the 140-year old Neoclassical
economics tradition.
From general reportage (O'Loughlin, 2004a):
Some business representatives accused Labor of failing to
understand the damage its competition policy would inflict on large
companies.
In this instance, Labor might be smarter than we generally give it
credit for. More general reportage (O'Loughlin & Hepworth,
2004):
The BCA is launching a major research project [Access Economics] to
highlight what it says are strong levels of competition in highly
consolidated industries such as the retail grocery, petrol and
banking markets, a move designed to debunk claims by small business
that mergers and alliances are reducing competition. "We have to be
strong internationally, that means there is pressure on our
companies to consolidate within their industry sectors", said BCA
chief executive Katie Lahey. "If we don't have strong competitors
in Australia it just encourages more overseas entrants because
we're just ripe for being picked off," she added.
Two dimensions of the retail duopoly's operations are
pertinent here. First, the dominant source of Woolworths' and
Coles' revenue is from extractions (due to their market power) from
suppliers (Jones, 2006), complemented by low shopping centre rentals
cross-subsidised by other tenants. Second, grocery prices at Woolworths
and Coles are not consistently lower than elsewhere; further, pricing
competition historically has come from other competitors (IGA, Aldi)
rather than from between the duopolists (ibid.).
Another axiom from the corporate lobby is that competition is
essentially subject to the law of the jungle--might makes right. This
declaration is contradictory to the prior general story, but is
displayed only to select audiences. Thus, claims Mark Christensen,
'economic consultant, ex-adviser on economic reform at the
Queensland Treasury & Productivity Commission' (Christensen,
2005):
The confusion over [the attempted definition and measurement of]
market power arises from its inextricable link with all that is
positive about the free market.... Accepting private sector
autonomy as necessary for our success also means accepting the
potential for this freedom to be abused. The discretion needed to
make commercial decisions cannot be divided into good and bad
parts. Ultimately, the free market is an all-or-nothing policy
proposition.
Ditto the High Court's Chief Justice Gleeson, in ACCC v
Berbatis (2003), with the competition regulator unsuccessfully acting
for the tenant in litigation against the landlord (Berbatis):
A person is not in a position of relevant disadvantage,
constitutional, situational, or otherwise, simply because of
inequality of bargaining power. Many, perhaps even most, contracts
are made between parties of unequal bargaining power, and good
conscience does not require parties to contractual negotiations to
forfeit their advantages, or neglect their own interests. Parties
to commercial negotiations frequently use their bargaining power to
"extract" concessions from other parties. That is the stuff of
ordinary commercial dealing.
The Big Business Propaganda Schema to Reinforce Its Story
The large corporates and their apologists are persistent in the
dissemination of propaganda, seeking to obfuscate their power and render
illegitimate any attempts to constrain it. Reproduced below is an array
of statements, suitably categorised, that illustrates these self-serving
processes.
Assume away or deny as non-existent the structural imbalance of
power and its abuse
Here is Hugh Morgan, then BCA President (Morgan, 2004a):
The recommendations in the [Senate Economics Committee Report,
2004] are framed under the guise of protecting small from large
business. In fact, they are about protecting inefficient
businesses, and in the process seek to undermine fundamental
principles of competition.
Morgan again, in response to the Senate Committee Chair claiming
that he is ill-informed (Morgan, 2004b):
The result of all these changes will be to restrain the ability of
larger corporations to engage in legitimate commercial competition.
Less efficient firms may benefit from lower competition, but
consumers will pay the price.
Ray Steinwall on a similar theme (Steinwall, 2004):
Lower prices quintessentially reflect competition at work.
Incorrectly condemning conduct that delivers these benefits risks
anti-competitive price rises. In theory [sic] cost savings are
delivered through aggressive competition, weeds out less
competitive and less efficient firms, which ultimately fail.
In short, those who die (small business by definition) are those
who deserve to die; small business is constitutionally fated to die. Big
business dominance is claimed to be achieved by legitimate means,
foremost of which is greater efficiency--neither of which can be
presumed.
Mislead or dissemble
From general reportage regarding the SME lobbies' push to
strengthen s.46 (O'Loughlin & Winestock, 2003):
Big business lawyers [the Law Council of Australia's trade
practices committee] warned yesterday that the ACCC's call for
tougher laws to stop unfairly aggressive competition would result
in higher prices ... [by impeding] the ability of companies to
compete by lowering prices.
From an Australian Financial Review Editorial (Editorial, 2004):
... mistaken findings of predatory pricing deprive consumers of low
prices resulting from healthy competition and impose heavy costs on
the community. The conventional wisdom that the Boral case exposed
flaws in s.46 is also wrong.
From general reportage (O'Loughlin, 2004b):
Specifically, [BCA-sponsored Access Economics] warned that
legitimate marketing strategies such as discount pricing could be
outlawed if the Senate proposals were implemented.
These claims are simply wrong. No proposals for amending s.46
preclude price competition; rather they preclude predatory pricing based
on the misuse of market power. More, the High Court's decision in
Boral effectively neutered s.46 in all but the most extreme possession
of market power and most blatant of abuses.
From a later Australian Financial Review Editorial (Editorial,
2007):
[The small business lobby labours under a misconception] that the
section exists to protect small firms from nasty competitive
behaviour by large players. But [s.46] is there to protect
competition itself.
Wrong again; and a long-standing and serious misrepresentation.
S.46 attempts to protect fair trading (i.e. competitors), through which
competition is served, as evident in the wording itself: (14)
s.46: (1) A corporation that has a substantial degree of power in a
market shall not take advantage of that power in that or any other
market for the purpose of:
(a) eliminating or substantially damaging a competitor of the
corporation or of a body corporate that is related to the
corporation in that or any other market; etc.
From John Durie, journalist (Durie, 2004a):
A Whitehall Associates report [Spencer, 2004] on price determinants
in the food industry has noted retail competition in Australia is
intense ... There is also no documentary evidence to show the big
retailers are killing competition and controlling prices.
Rather, what retail competition exists is coming from businesses
other than the retail duopoly. Further, the latter claim is wrong. The
Baird Committee inquiry (Joint Select Committee on the Retailing Sector,
1999) exposed blatant predatory pricing by Woolworths, subsequently
ignored by the authorities.
From Graeme Samuel, ACCC Chairman, in a speech later in 2004
(Samuel, 2004):
The [Whitehall] Report notes that a 'highly competitive retail
sector combined with the strong presence of national and
international brands has resulted in a low margin, by world
standards, grocery sector'--hardly the sign of a rampant duopoly
extracting monopoly profits.
Wrong again. The Whitehall report confused the duopoly
retailers' low margins on turnover with their margins on capital
employed, which are substantial. Moreover, the Whitehall report claimed
wrongly that a 2002 ACCC report (requested by the Baird inquiry) which
had assumed away retailer market power had actually denied its existence
(Australian Competition & Consumer Commission, 2002). Here is a
scandalous phenomenon in which official reports engage in circular
citation, each denying the existence of large retailer market power
although each avoided an examination of the issue. The reputed absence
of retailer market power thereby acquires definitive status, although
the grounds for its declaration are absent. Wishful thinking is
converted into tangible reality.
The ACCC subsequently presided over a massive whitewash report
(Australian Competition & Consumer Commission, 2008a) which claimed,
again without proper investigation and denying confidentiality to
submitted evidence, that market power was not abused in the retail
grocery sector.
Claim the support of authority
Examples abound. From Hugh Morgan, then BCA President (Morgan,
2004a):
Yet the Senate wants to tamper with a system which expert opinion
has repeatedly endorsed.
From Ray Steinwall, sometime academic lawyer (Steinwall, 2004):
The dilemma is that successive reviews, including last year's
Dawson Review, have endorsed the judgement of other industrialized
countries that economic efficiency is the ultimate goal of
competition policy.
From John Durie, journalist (Durie, 2004a):
[Samuel, ACCC Chairman] has long argued that big retailers, while
dominating the industry, might actually promote competition....
Many in the legal community still support the view that the section
[s.46] is fine and legislative changes may come with unintended
consequences.
It is a mark of desperation to rely on authority, indeed unnamed
authority, to underpin one's argument. Yet the Steinwall claim is
wrong, and the Morgan and Durie claims merely implicitly highlight that
much of the legal establishment is party to the corruption.
Lay on the chutzpah
From general reportage with respect to the stance of Woolworths
(O'Loughlin & Winestock, 2003):
Woolworths, owner of the Safeway supermarket chain, which is
fighting a section 46 case against the ACCC, is also resisting any
change. "Most large businesses in Australia... meet their
obligations under the Act", Woolworths said in a submission to the
Senate inquiry.
It is instructive that this claim of corporate high-mindedness
comes from a company that was found to have misused its market power in
attempting to prevent bread price discounting by its small competitors
during the mid-1990s (and which consumed significant public resources in
litigation costs). Woolworths was again (with Coles) found guilty in
misusing its market power with respect to comprehensive objections to
liquor license applications by independent liquor retailers (Jones,
2006). The then Woolworths CEO Roger Corbett remained unrepentant. (15)
This from Hugh Morgan, then BCA President (Morgan, 2004a):
The Business Council recognises the important role that small
business plays in the Australian economy.... The prosperity of many
of these businesses, however, depends on the fortunes of
Australia's largest companies.
This claim is consistent with those outlined above. Yet this claim
is made in the same breath (albeit to different audiences) as the claim
that meaningful 'competition' is to be understood as that
which is justly wiping out such small businesses.
Morgan again, in response to the Senate Committee Chair claiming
that Morgan is ill-informed (Morgan, 2004b):
... this lower threshold [for attributing 'market power' under
s.46] will mean many more medium and smaller companies risk being
captured by the [A]ct ...
From Doug Shireffs, former 'regulatory economist', then
at Minter Ellison (Shireffs, 2004):
[The 2004 Senate Economics Committee Report's] Recommendation 8
[opposing unilateral variation of contract by corporates] is about
distorting the market in favour of businesses such as dealerships
and franchisees.
This proposition is equally instructive regarding the insouciance of pro-corporate ideologues. A contract is a contract, the sacred
foundation of the common law, except that the more powerful party should
have the right to break it unilaterally. Claims such as these, which
fall into the realm of the blatantly dishonest, highlight that corporate
protagonists have confidence that they can pronounce that black is white
without adverse repercussions.
Resort to abuse and denigration
From John Durie, journalist (Durie, 2004b):
A populist politician selling trade practices reform as a cure-all
for small business is unlikely to let the facts get in the way of a
good sales pitch, and Mark Latham's effort yesterday [as Labor
Party leader] was true to form.
Durie again (Durie, 2005):
Trade practices reform is now stuck in a classic deadlock between a
badly misinformed senator (Barnaby Joyce) and the Treasurer, who
rightly has no plans to give in to his demands.
From Robert Shilkin, academic lawyer (Shilkin, 2005):
[Senator Barnaby] Joyce's position on competition law already
cracks the trifecta: Dumb law, Dumb economics, Dumb politics.
Both ex-Labor MP Mark Latham and National Party Barnaby Joyce have
their weaknesses but, in respect to the issues under discussion, they
had a better understanding of the issues than do their opponents.
Several key words in the Establishment's rhetorical lexicon are
prominent here. A favoured emotion-packed label to denigrate the enemy
is 'populism'. Populism reflects the ignorance of the masses,
unfortunately endowed with voting rights. By contrast,
'reform' is the magical word to bolster Establishment opinion,
out of the mouths of the corporate lobby and its satraps. Personal abuse
is the refuge for the opinion-maker dependent on unexamined prejudices.
Claim that uncertainty and anarchy will prevail unless corporate
business rules
From Stephen Bartholomeusz, journalist (Bartholomeusz, 2004):
... there is a significant risk that uncertainty about the line
between legitimate and illegitimate behaviour would inevitably
reduce competitive intensity.
From Doug Shireffs, former 'regulatory economist', then
Minter Ellison (Shireffs, 2004):
The [2004 Senate Economics Committee Report] majority's proposal
... would help transfer wealth from large businesses to small ones
by restricting large businesses' ability to manage risk.
From general reportage (O'Loughlin, 2004b):
Access Economics [report commissioned by the BCA] warned that
'while not radical' the proposed changes would 'create an
unwarranted risk that pro-competitive conduct will be captured'.
From Mark Poddar, Malleson Stephen Jaques (Poddar, 2007):
If the standards are too uncertain, enterprises will be reluctant
to undertake ordinary business activities and competition will be
stifled.... We must all be vigilant against any more proposals to
amend the Act that risk stifling competitive activities of business
and therefore ultimately to the detriment of Australian consumers.
Given that competition is supposed to be encapsulated in the law of
the jungle, this claimed fear of the unknown, of the challenge of the
battle for supremacy, is rather too precious.
Claim that economic growth and welfare in general will suffer
unless big business rules
From an Australian Financial Review (Editorial, 2004):
... making it easier for small firms to attack the market conduct of
large ones will not add to community welfare; it could subtract
from it by inhibiting healthy competition.
From John Durie, journalist (Durie, 2004a):
... without the pro-market reforms [promulgated by big business and
instigated by Paul Keating, Latham's pro small business TP Act
amendment plan] is a recipe for a dismal government, if, indeed,
economic growth and welfare is an aim.
From general reportage (O'Loughlin, 2004a):
Yesterday, corporate bosses were once again doubting the party's
economic credentials. Caltex chairman Dick Warburton, who has led
big business' campaign for competition law reform, said [Latham's]
plan was "going back 20 years". "It was the Labor party that
actually led us out of the protectionist years," he said.
From the micro to the macro, the right to rule of corporate
business is now indispensable for the general wellbeing of the
community.
In general, there are lies, damned lies and corporate propaganda.
None of the claims quoted above bear any resemblance to typical market
relations between corporate business and SMEs or the function of the
Trade Practices Act in enforcing sustainable pro-competitive market
structures and behaviour. The claims complement each other in forging a
mythical world of undiminished bounty behind which the corporate sector
can engage in almost any anti-competitive and unethical practice with
impunity.
The Outcome of the Battle
A succession of amendments to the Trade Practices Act implicitly
reflects the drawn-out conflict over the Act. In 2006, Treasurer
Costello went ahead with legislating the Dawson report recommendations
while ignoring the Senate Economics Committee recommendations in favour
of small business. (16) In 2007, Costello set about successfully
'smooching' the key small business lobbies (and National Party
Senator Ron Boswell, whose support was crucial) to gain support for a
cynical amendment to s.46 that did little more than elaborate on the
existing wording (Jones, 2007a). Senator Joyce remained outside the
fold. At the eleventh hour, with a federal election pending, Costello
uncharacteristically agreed to an amendment to s.46 proffered by Joyce;
the amended Act was assented to in September 2007.17 The crucial element
in Joyce's 'Birdsville' amendment is in s.46(1AA)
(emphasis mine):
A corporation that has a substantial share of a market must not
supply, or offer to supply, goods or services for a sustained
period at a price that is less than the relevant cost to the
corporation of supplying such goods or services, for the purpose of
[etc.]
The 'substantial market share' was seen by its proponents
as complementing and strengthening the existing 'substantial market
power' criterion. The legal establishment was (and remains)
appalled and attacked the amendment with claims comparable to those
outlined above. Federal Labor readily joined the opposing forces, and
the repeal of 'Birdsville' was a high priority upon attaining
office in November 2007.
Labor duly legislated for a repeal, but the Senate (the Coalition
plus Senators Fielding and Xenophon) overturned the repeal, and
Birdsville remains in the Act. With then ACCC Chairman Graeme Samuel
also unsympathetic to the amendment and to the intent of s.46 in general
(and little prospect of the incoming Chairman, economist Rod Sims,
reversing this stance), the implication is that there will be no test of
the amended s.46 for the indefinite future. In practice, s.46 will
remain inoperative in spite of its formal strengthening.
Noteworthy is that the prestigious OECD has been brought into the
battle against Birdsville. Always touted as a detached research
organisation of high repute, significant sections of OECD
nation-specific publications are effectively drafted by that
country's establishment nationals. The OECD's Reviews of
regulatory reform Australia 2010 labels the Birdsville amendment
'politically motivated' and cries repeatedly for its repeal
(OECD, 2010: 18, 82, 164, 180), using the same inaccurate or misleading
language used by Australian opponents. (18)
The Market Rules OK but Don't Ask How it Works
The period 2004-08 witnessed a long propaganda war against SMEs
achieving some redress through sympathetic amendments to the Trade
Practices Act, especially to s.46. Via this propaganda, content-less
abstractions have been reified. Symbolic fictions have thus become
reality and reality is suppressed. Power is exercised and reproduced
opaquely behind reified fictions. The hole is privileged over the
doughnut. Structured exploitation prevails in an ideological environment
committed to its denial. (19)
It is instructive to contemplate the role of intelligence, evidence
and analysis in this process--notable by their absence. Is it possible
that the legendary 'power of the pen' is vitiated by the pen
in the service of power? The arguments of the big business lobby are
without substance--worse misleading and dishonest. Yet the big business
lobby has prevailed in this arena.
Do bad arguments drive out good? Or does power make reasoned
argument irrelevant? This issue is of significance to the
academic/intellectual community, which formally dwells in the world of
ideas, evidence and analysis. Are academics/intellectuals irrelevant and
thus wasting their time? Is even Gramsci's 'pessimism of the
intellect / optimism of the will' an added self-delusion? At the
very least, if academics/intellectuals want to maintain their relevance,
the analysis of power sui generis should be the centerpiece of all the
social 'sciences'.
Evan Jones is Honorary Associate in Political Economy at the
University of Sydney.
evan.jones@sydney.edu.au
References
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Quotation Sources
Bartholomeusz, Stephen (2004), Election year smell as Senators
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Court Cases Cited
Australian Competition & Consumer Commission v Berbatis
Holdings Pty Ltd, HCA 18, 9 April 2003.
Boral Besser Masonry v Australian Competition & Consumer
Commission, HCA 5, 7 February 2003.
Queensland Wire Industries Pty Ltd v Broken Hill Pty Co Ltd, HCA 6,
8 February 1989. Rural Press Ltd v ACCC, HCA 75, 11 December 2003.
(1) Representative of this latter phenomenon is the labour
'market'. The humaneness of labour and the distinct
discretionary character of its role in the production process makes
labour both a commodity and significantly more than a commodity. Apart
from other mechanisms of control by both 'purchasers' of
labour and the state, a massive corpus of law has evolved to ensure that
labour 'markets' are densely regulated--not least to ensure
that contract law, relevant to the exchange of conventional commodities,
remains inapplicable (c/f Merritt, 1982; Forbath, 1991).
(2) Economists having treated their own specialty so cavalierly,
the field has been ripe for the resurgence of an economic sociology
whose brief is the social and institutional context of
'market' behaviour. C/f Smelser & Swedberg (1994).
Unfortunately, much of this genre is both superficial and prolix, and
the documentation of real world market activity remains a fertile avenue
for scholars unfettered by disciplinary-specific baggage.
(3) The issue is covered at greater length in Jones (2006).
(4) The 'moral economy' vision is pre-capitalist, opposed
to the imposition of the pecuniary imperative on economics
relationships, emphasising the 'just price', customary work
patterns, moral restraint, etc (c/f Owen, 2009). Marx himself was
derisive of this vision as utopian. But the moral economy vision
survived the rise of capitalist imperatives, represented (for example)
in petty-bourgeois, craft union and co-operatives forces and politics,
and even in the reformist forces that have served to curb the excesses
of capitalist hegemony.
(5) The parlous early years under the 1974 Act are dissected by
then Commissioner, George Venturini (Venturini, 1980). The history of
legislative impasse before the Act is covered in Hopkins (1978).
(6) The Trade Practices Act has been replaced by the Competition
and Consumer Act 2010, effective 1 January 2011. The previous Act's
s.51 is now replicated in the new Act's Schedule 2, ss.20-22.
(7) That big capital resented this judgement was highlighted over
twenty years later at a Law Council of Australia trade practices
workshop. Federal Court Chief Justice Patrick Keane, in 1989 junior
counsel for BHP, launched into a tirade against the judgement (Eyers,
2010).
(8) Big capital's revenge was reinforced later in the same
year in Rural Press v ACCC (2003).
(9) Costello appointed Graeme Samuel (investment banker and
previously head of the pro-big business National Competition Council) to
replace Fels in July 2003.
(10) The Dawson Report did recommend the improvement of procedures
to facilitate 'collective bargaining' by powerless small
suppliers with corporate purchasers. This recommendation, out of
character with the thrust of the report, appears to have been a
political fix to get small business support for the Dawson report. The
complex trajectory of collective bargaining procedures, very difficult
to implement because contrary to basic 'anti-competitive
contracts' conventions, will not be pursued here.
(11) Chaney is now chairman of both Wesfarmers and the National
Australia Bank. The exploitative relationship between Wesfarmers
(holding company for Bunnings and Coles) and the NAB with their small
business suppliers and customers respectively is far removed from
relations of 'constructive interdependence'.
(12) A rare exception is the evidence embodied in a bipartisan
Parliamentary report, Finding a balance, following an inquiry in which
SME personnel were (atypically) guaranteed confidentiality with respect
to their submissions and evidence (House of Representatives Standing
Committee on Industry, Science and Technology, 1997).
(13) The finance media regularly lectures on the dysfunctionality
of multi-firm industries, inferring the desirability of
'rationalisation' and 'consolidation'. Sometime
Fairfax journalist Stephen Bartholomeusz has regularly written on this
theme--c/f Bartholomeusz (2002).
(14) This perennial misrepresentation has been given succour by the
fact that even the judges in Queensland Wire v BHP reproduced this
misstatement of s.46's wording and intent.
(15) Journalist Stephen McMahon commented (with respect to the
bread pricing case, and on the occasion of Corbett's appointment to
the Reserve Bank board): "For almost 10 years, Woolworths'
senior management fought the case at every turn, leading some analysts
and shareholders to wonder if [they] needed a refresher course on what
constitutes a breach of the Trade Practices Act" (McMahon, 2006).
(16) National Party Senator Barnaby Joyce refused his vote, but
Costello just garnered the numbers by gaining the support of Family
First Senator Steve Fielding.
(17) The amendment was drafted by Frank Zumbo, University of New
South Wales academic, a rare lawyer in Australia actively sympathetic to
small business interests.
(18) The report's preface acknowledges the Deregulation Group
of the federal Department of Finance and Deregulation, and special
consultant Caron Beaton- Wells, the latter an integral member of the
pro-corporate business Law Council of Australia.
(19) A parallel situation has long existed with respect to the
capital-labour relation. Ironically, the 'Chinese walls' of
expertise, especially in the legal profession, have resulted in the
interpretation of inter-capital conflict learning nothing from a
longstanding and elaborate tradition in the interpretation of
capital-labour conflict.