Speeches
Competition Law Conference, Sydney
Horizontal Arrangements – Competition Law and Cooperative Federalism
Justice Robert French
5 May 2007
Introduction
1
Federation denotes a class of solutions to the
problem of uniting people from different political communities
into a viable
national polity.� Professor Geoffrey Sawer, in 1976, spoke of a �spectrum of
federalism� as the range of reactions
to the situation in which:
� geographical
distribution of the power to govern is desired or has been achieved in a way
giving the several governmental
units of the system some degree of security �
some guarantee of continued existence as organisations and as holders of power.[1]
2
The distribution of power between the components
of a Federation sets boundaries upon their legislative competencies.
When, in a
Federation such as Australia, a national policy is necessary to meet national
challenges the powers necessary to implement
such a policy may cross those
boundaries.� One way of meeting the problem is to amend the Constitution. �In Australia that has proven to be a singularly unrewarding process.� A second way is the
coordinated exercise of relevant legislative
powers by all components of the
Federation � a horizontal arrangement.� This is presently the dominant model in
the implementation
of national competition policy.� A third way is the cession
of necessary power to the centre � a species of vertical integration.���
3
The Commonwealth of Australia Constitution Act 1900 established the Australian Federation and conferred
on the Commonwealth Parliament law-making powers with respect to specific
topics.�
The Constitutions of the States were continued in force subject to the
Commonwealth Constitution as were their law-making powers save for those vested
exclusively in the Commonwealth Parliament or withdrawn from the parliaments
of
the States.[2]��
The legislative powers of the Commonwealth are, for the most part, concurrent
with those of the States.� However where a law of
a State is inconsistent with
a law of the Commonwealth, the Commonwealth law shall prevail and the State law
shall, to the extent
of the inconsistency, be invalid.[3]
4
The existence of Federal and State polities, the
division of legislative powers between them and the scope for
concurrent laws
dealing with the same subject matter must be considered in devising any
national regulatory policy requiring legislative
implementation.� And in
today�s world, implementation may be affected by international obligations.�
The response best fitted to
meet such obligations is likely to be single,
coherent and national, rather than plural and sub-national.��
5
The above considerations are relevant to
competition policy and, generally speaking,� are reflected in its
implementation
in Australia. Unhappily, some Commonwealth and State
arrangements, involving interlocking or adopted statutes, while designed to
achieve a coherent national approach, have introduced a level of legal
complexity, jurisdictional uncertainty and associated transaction
costs which
may be unnecessarily high.� Some would say such costs are an unavoidable
incident of federation.� But where the complexity
pays little more than
cosmetic homage to State sovereignty, the simpler constitutional solution of
referral of powers, underpinned
by inter-governmental agreements with
appropriate safeguards, may be preferable.��
6
This paper considers the constitutional
distribution of powers which requires cooperative approaches to achieving
a
comprehensive competition law in Australia.� It does not pretend to offer a
comparative cost benefit analysis of the alternative
solutions.� Some of the
factors to be weighed in the balance, such as the benefits of multiple centres
of legislative and executive
power, are difficult if not impossible to
quantify.� The existence of effective State legislatures is seen by some as a
guarantee
of localism, productive pluralism and countervailing powers bringing
benefits outweighing the costs and inconveniences of a multiplicity
of
governments. �Others see the continued existence of such costly constitutional
arrangements for such a small population as a luxury
and an impediment to
effective participation in an international community which requires rapid and
coherent responses to changing
circumstances.� Between these poles there are
other views which would accept the cession to the national government of
limited State
law-making powers in order to facilitate national responses.��
7
The problem of implementing competition law in a
federal system is not unique to Australia.� There has been
debate and
discussion on the question in the United States in the context of concurrent
and sometimes conflicting antitrust laws
and enforcement action by federal and
state authorities.� However, in that country, unlike Australia, the position of
the States
as concurrent regulators of their own antitrust laws as well as
plaintiff parties in federal anti-trust litigation seems well entrenched.[4]�
8
�On the other side of the coin the European
Union in 2004 devolved to member States concurrent responsibility
for the administration
of community competition law reflected in Articles 81 and 82 of the Treaty of
Rome.� The European devolution
was made pursuant to Council Regulation (EC) No
1/2003.� Article 5 of that Regulation provides that the Competition Authorities
of
the Member States have power to apply Articles 81 and 82 of the Treaty in
individual cases.� By Article 6 of the Regulation, national
courts are given
the power to apply Articles 81 and 82.� The European Council, in an Explanatory
Preamble to the Regulation, referred
to the importance of effective and uniform
application of Articles 81 and 82 on the one hand, and on the other hand the
need for
effective supervision and simplified administration.� The Explanatory
Preamble continued:
The centralised
scheme � no longer secures a balance between those two objectives. �It hampers
application
of the Community competition rules by the courts and competition
authorities of the Member States, and the system of
notification it involves
prevents the Commission from concentrating its resources on curbing the most
serious infringements.� It also imposes considerable costs on undertakings.[5]�� �
Given the population of the expanded European Community and the
immense burden of administering a community-wide competition law
from a central
authority, it is not surprising that such a step was taken.� The position in Australia, however, generates quite
different imperatives.
Constitutional limits on the application
of national competition laws
9
Competition policy is concerned with a variety
of activities and a variety of actors.� Competition in Australia
may be affected by conduct:
1.�������� in
trade or commerce which may be:
���������� (a)�������� within
the boundaries of a State;
���������� (b)�������� within
a Territory;��
���������� (c)�������� among
the States;
���������� (d)�������� with
other countries.
2.�������� which is not in trade or commerce but
nevertheless affects competition, eg regulatory or fiscal impositions and
associated administration;
3.�������� by
entities which may be:
����������� (a)�������� trading
or financial corporations formed within Australia;
����������� (b)�������� foreign
corporations;
����������� (c)�������� other
incorporated bodies;
����������� (d)�������� Commonwealth, State and Territory
governments and their statutory �������� �������� �������� ��������������
�authorities, including the providers of public
services;
����������� (e)�������� local governments;
����������� (f)�������� natural persons as individuals
or partnerships or unincorporated �������� �������� �������� �������
associations;
����������� (g)�������� foreign countries, their agents
or authorities.
10
The range of activities and entities relevant to
competition law extends beyond the subjects with respect
to which the
Commonwealth Parliament has legislative competence.� Relevantly the
Commonwealth Parliament may make laws with
respect to:
(a) trade and commerce with other countries, and among the
States;[6]
(b) banking, other than State
banking; also State banking extending beyond the limits �������� ���� of the State
concerned,
the incorporation of banks, and the issue of paper money;[7]
(c)�������� insurance, other than
State insurance; also State insurance beyond the limits of the State concerned;[8]
(d) copyrights, patents of
inventions and designs, and trade marks;[9]
(e) foreign corporations, and
trading or financial corporations formed within the limits of the Commonwealth;[10]
(f) external affairs;[11]
(g) matters incidental to
the execution of any power vested in it by this Constitution in �������� ��the Parliament
or in either House thereof, or in the Government of the�Commonwealth, or in the
Federal Judicature, or in any department or officer of the Commonwealth.[12]
The last mentioned �incidental� power may be read not only with the
legislative powers of the Commonwealth Parliament but also
the executive power
conferred on the Commonwealth by s 61 of the Constitution.� In R v Hughes
[13] the High Court said that it is
plain enough that s 51(xxxix) empowers the Parliament to legislate in aid of
the executive power.� It added the caveat, related to the conferral of State
functions on Commonwealth authorities, that �.. it would be another matter to
conclude that this means that the Parliament
may legislate in aid of any
subject which the Executive Government regards as of national interest and
concern ��.� ��This
is relevant to the power of the Commonwealth Parliament to
legislate in aid of inter-governmental agreements entered into by
the
Commonwealth executive with� State and Territory governments.� In this respect
the incidental power has some of the ambulatory
character of the external
affairs power.
11
Importantly the Commonwealth Parliament is also
entitled to make laws with respect to:
matters referred to
the Parliament of the Commonwealth by the Parliament or Parliaments of any
State or States, but
so that the law shall extend only to States by whose
Parliaments the matter is referred, or which afterwards adopt the law;[14]
Such laws are federal laws and apply only in the referring or
adopting States.�
12
In addition to the powers it has under s 51, the
Commonwealth Parliament may make laws for the government of any Territory by
virtue of s 122.�
13
The legislative powers set out in s 51 are, for
the most part, concurrent with those of the States.�� Even after the enactment
of the first Commonwealth competition law,
The Australian Industries
Preservation Act 1906, there were State laws on competition related
matters.[15]�
The case law on the State statutes is sparse.[16]�
As Professor Walker said in 1967:
Like the federal
statute of 1906, these have remained largely unenforced owing to restrictive
interpretation, apathy in
government and ignorance among the people;�[17]
14
The history of Commonwealth legislation is well
known and it is not necessary to repeat it in detail.� The 1906
Act showed
little sign of life for most of its existence.� Its successor, the Trade
Practices Act 1965 (Cth), provided for a Register of Examinable
Agreements.� It became the Restrictive Trade Practices Act 1971 but, in
the Concrete Pipes� case was found to exceed limits on Commonwealth
legislative power[18].
15
The Trade Practices Act 1974 (TPA), when
enacted, invoked every available head of constitutional power to maximise the
range of entities and conduct within its
purview.� It relied principally on the
corporations and incidental powers.� However, s 6(2) established, for some
parts of the Act, an application limited by the assumption that references in
them to trade and commerce were
confined to trade and commerce:
(i)�������� between Australia and places outside Australia;
(ii)������� among the States;
(iii)������ within a Territory, between a State and a Territory or
between two Territories; or
(iv)������ by way of the supply of
goods or services to Australia or an authority or instrumentality of Australia.
For the specified classes of trade or commerce the TPA did not need
to rely upon the corporations power but relied upon s 51(i),
s 51(xxxix),
presumably read with s 61 of the Constitution, and s 122.� Section 6(3) applied
the TPA to individuals where their conduct involved the use of postal,
telegraphic or telephonic services or takes place
in a radio or television
broadcast.� Certain parts of the TPA were extended by s 6(4) to conduct done in
the course of the promotional activities of a professional person, where the
relevant conduct was in a Territory.�
16
Section 55 of the TPA, which prohibits
misleading conduct as to the nature, the manufacturing process, the
characteristics, the suitability
for their purpose or the quantity of any
goods, applied beyond corporations to �persons� and relied upon the external
affairs power
and Australia�s notification of the Paris Convention for the
Protection of Industrial Property.[19]
17
These applications of the Act, outside the large
and increasing scope of the corporations, and trade and commerce
powers, left
gaps in its coverage and thus something of a Swiss cheese statute.�
Commonwealth legislative power alone could not deliver
a comprehensive and
coherent national competition law.� An answer to the problem was found in the
field of cooperative federalism.�
That term was once described by McHugh J as a
political slogan.[20]�
No doubt it has been used as a political slogan but it is also descriptive of a
range of legal mechanisms either permitted or expressly
contemplated by the
Constitution.� Indeed it would not be going too far to say that the
Constitution, while marking out the boundaries of legislative power between the
components of the Federation, rests upon an assumption of cooperation
between
them.��
18
Before considering the way in which cooperative
federalism has been used to advance national competition policy,
it is useful
to review the cooperative mechanisms which are available and have been used in
other contexts.
Mechanisms of cooperative federalism
19
Where the legislative powers of the Commonwealth
are to be deployed in an area requiring comprehensive national
coverage, there
are mechanisms of cooperative federalism under which such coverage can be
achieved.� These include:
1.�������� Intergovernmental agreements providing for:
����������� (a)������� uniform legislation enacted separately by
each participating polity;
����������� (b)������� interlocking
legislation by Commonwealth, State and Territory parliaments which may involve
adoption
by all of a standard law enacted by one.
2.�������� Delegation of legislative
power:
����������� (a)������� by the
Commonwealth under s 51(xxxviii) of the Constitution;[21]
����������� (b)������� by the Commonwealth
under the Territories power.
3.�������� Referral of State
legislative power to the Commonwealth on a particular subject or to support a
particular
statute.
4.�������� Executive cooperation by
way of inter-governmental agreements.
5.�������� Judicial cooperation.
The history of corporations regulation in Australia shows a
succession of cooperative and not so cooperative arrangements at work.
20
In 1961, under a Uniform Companies Act Scheme
agreed between them, each State parliament passed its own Companies
Act which
mirrored the terms of the Companies Act of every other State.� The law in each
State had application only within the territorial
limits of the jurisdiction of
that State.� Jurisdiction was exercised by the Courts of the States.� There was
thus a mosaic of similar
laws throughout the country rather than one law
covering the whole country.� The scheme, although simple in concept, was
susceptible
to the development of differences over time because of pressures
brought to bear upon particular State legislatures.�
21
In 1981 the Uniform Companies Scheme was
replaced by another cooperative scheme based upon the Companies Act 1981
(ACT) enacted by the Commonwealth Parliament for the Australian Capital
Territory in reliance upon s 122 of the Constitution.� Each of the States
passed a Companies Code which reflected the provisions of the Commonwealth
Act.� The Scheme was overseen by
a Ministerial Council for Companies and
Securities and a national regulator, called �The National Companies and Securities
Commission�
(NCSC), which worked in conjunction with State regulatory
authorities.
22
In 1989 the Commonwealth, acting unilaterally in
reliance upon the corporations power, passed the Corporations Act 1989
imposing a national scheme of corporate regulation.� It established the
Australian Securities Commission (ASC) under that Act.� In
1990 the High Court
held elements of the Act invalid because the Commonwealth did not have power to
make laws about the incorporation
of companies.[22]� Under a new cooperative
arrangement the Commonwealth then enacted the Corporations Act 1989 (ACT)
and the Australian Securities Commission Act 1989 (ACT), each being a
law for the Australian Capital Territory.� The States each passed their own
statutes which applied the provisions
of the Territory Acts designated as the
Corporations Law and the ASIC Law respectively as laws of the respective
States.� The States
also purported to confer jurisdiction on the Federal Court
and the State Supreme Courts with respect to civil matters arising under
their Corporations
and ASC laws.� In 1999 the High Court struck down so much of the legislation as
purported to confer jurisdiction
on the Federal Court with respect to matters
arising under the State laws.[23]�
The difficulties caused by this invalidation of the cross vesting of State jurisdiction
to the Federal Court were compounded by
the High Court�s approach to the
construction of laws made under the scheme in so far as they conferred
functions under State law
upon Federal authorities such as the Commonwealth
Director of Public Prosecutions and the Australian Securities and Investments
Commission.[24]
23
The striking down of the cross vesting
arrangements under the cooperative corporations scheme led, after some
political contention, to another cooperative solution whereby the States
referred to the Commonwealth the power to make laws in terms
of the texts of a
proposed Corporations Act 2001 and an Australian Securities and
Investments Commission Act 2001.� These Bills largely reflected the terms
of the former Corporations Law and ASIC Law.� Each State also referred to the
Commonwealth:
The formation of
corporations, corporate regulation and the regulation of financial products and
services ... to the extent
of the making of laws with respect to those matters
by making express amendments to the corporations legislation.
The latter reference had effect only to the extent that the matter
was not already a subject of Commonwealth power.� There was a
five year sunset
clause for each reference.
24
Following the references by the States the
Commonwealth Parliament, relying upon s 51(xxxvii), passed the Corporations
Act 2001 (Cth) and the Australian Securities and Investment Commission
Act 2001(Cth).� The Commonwealth and the States made an agreement which included
undertakings about the use of the referred powers and procedures
for the
alteration of the statutes and for termination of the references.� The
agreement required that the operation of the scheme
be reviewed every three
years.� The scheme was powerfully supported by referral agreements made by Victoria and New South Wales directly
with the Commonwealth.� Other States were then left
with little option but to fall into line.� Queensland did so.� Western Australia
did so following a change of government in that State.� South Australia
and Tasmania also joined after the Commonwealth agreed to
consider an amendment
limiting the degree to which the power could be used to require persons to
incorporate.
25
The development of the comprehensive regulation
of corporations in Australia showcases cooperative arrangements
which are
possible under the Constitution.� The most drastic of them from the States�
point of view is referral because that does involve an expansion, be it
permanent or
temporary, of Commonwealth legislative power on the subject matter
referred.� It is no doubt for this reason that the referral in
relation to
corporations was limited to the text of a particular Bill and subject to a
sunset clause.�
26
There have been a number of references of power
pursuant to s 51(xxxvii) since Federation although the use of that provision
become more prominent because of its recent applications to corporations and
anti-terrorism laws.� Referrals have covered, inter alia, meat inspection,
State banking, poultry processing and air navigation.�
All States except Western Australia have referred powers in relation to child custody, guardianship access
and maintenance to the
Commonwealth to avoid the artificiality of
constitutionally derived distinctions.� One important application of the
referral power
is the mutual recognition scheme.� It applies to occupational
qualifications and product standards.� It has implications for competition
policy in facilitating the movement of goods and services between the States.�
The scheme emerged from a Premiers� Conference in
1990 which established a
Commonwealth/State Committee on Regulatory Reform in 1991.� That Committee
prepared a discussion paper called
�The Mutual Recognition of Standards and
Regulations in Australia�.� The paper pointed to the possibility that Australia might have
more barriers to trade in goods and services between States and
Territories than existed between the member nations of the European
Community.�
Seminars were held in each capital city.� In November 1991 Premiers and Chief
Ministers met and a formal agreement was
signed between the Commonwealth, the
States and the Territories on 11 May 1992.� The Mutual Recognition Act 1992
(Cth) was passed as a law of the Commonwealth following the referrals of power
by the Parliaments of New South Wales and Queensland.�
Each of the referrals
was for a fixed period.� The matters referred were defined in the Referring
Acts in terms of the �enactment
of an Act in the terms or substantially the
terms set out in the schedule�.� In each case the proposed Mutual Recognition
Bill 1992 (Cth) was scheduled to the State Referring Act.� The law passed by
the Parliament of the Commonwealth under that referral was then
adopted by the
other States and Territories, last with historical consistency, by Western Australia.�
27
More recently the States referred power to the
Commonwealth to make laws with respect to terrorism.� The references
were, in
substance, text references.� In Western Australia the referring statute was the
Terrorism (Commonwealth Powers) Act 2002 (WA).� The text of the referred
provisions was set out in Schedule 1 to that Act and comprised a new Pt 5.3 of
the Commonwealth Criminal
Code.� The operative provision of the referring Act was
s 4 which referred:
(a)������� the matters to which the
referred provisions relate, but only to the extent of the making of laws with
respect to those
matters by including the referred provisions in the
Commonwealth Criminal Code in the terms, or substantially in the terms, of the
text set out in Schedule 1; and
(b)������ the matter of terrorist acts,
and actions relating to terrorist acts, but only to the extent of the making of
laws with
respect to that matter by making express amendments of the terrorism
legislation or the criminal responsibility legislation.�
The reference was fixed in time and subject to termination by
proclamation.
28
The referral provision, s 51(xxxvii) confers
upon the Parliament of the Commonwealth the power to make laws with
respect to
matters referred.� The laws so made are federal laws.� The power to make such
laws is subject to the Constitution, a condition set out in the opening words
of s 51.� This means that constitutional prohibitions will operate with respect
to them.� As federal laws, laws made pursuant to s 51(xxxvii) will attract the
operation of s 109 and will override inconsistent State laws.� The Corporations
Act 2001 endeavoured to avoid the risks of inadvertent inconsistency by
expressly denying any intention �to exclude or limit the concurrent
operation
of any law of a State�.� Indeed under s 5F of that Act the States may exclude
the operation of the Corporations Law in relation to a matter in whole or in
part.� The Commonwealth
by regulation can counter such an exclusion.� There are
also rollback provisions in ss 5G and 5I.�
29
The language of s 51(xxxvii) raises
constructional questions.� The �matters� which can be referred under s
51(xxxvii)
cover not only subject matter references but also text references of
the kind that have been applied in the mutual recognition scheme
and the Corporations
Act scheme.[25]��
There is a question as to whether a reference unlimited in time is irrevocable.[26]� However there appears to be
little controversy that a referral may validly be made for a fixed period.[27]� The availability of specific
text references limited in time is of importance in securing the agreement of
States to use the procedure
at all.� The question remains - what happens to a
Commonwealth law passed under the referral power if a referring State
terminates
its referral whether according to a self-executing sunset clause or
by revocation.� It might be expected that such a law would continue
in force in
the State for there is nothing in the grant of the power which makes the law
under it self-terminating upon revocation
of the referral.� The position of
referring States and adopting States may be different.� That is because the
reference in s 51(xxxvii)
to States whose parliaments �afterwards adopt the
law� arguably provides for the extension of the law to those States only during
the currency of their adoption of it.� The possibility of laws made under a
referral outliving the referral itself may not be a practical
problem if, on a
text referral, the proposed law contains a self-executing terminating provision
operative upon revocation of the
referral by a referring State.� Such a
termination provision could be framed to apply only to the revoking State
leaving the law
in force in other referring or adopting States.��
30
A related question arises about the basis upon
which a law made under a referral may be amended.� Where it is
a subject matter
that is referred then so long as the referral subsists the Commonwealth should
be able to amend laws made pursuant
to it provided the amendment does not take
the laws outside the scope of the subject matter referred.� The effect of
amendment upon
the application of the law to States which have adopted the
original law rather than refer the law-making power is questionable.�
Amendment
of a referred law would seem to require adoption by non-referring States either
of the amendment or of the law as amended
if it is to continue to have effect
in those States.�
31
The States can adopt protective mechanisms to
deter the Commonwealth from non-consensual amendment if the text
of the law
referred is subject to a condition that it would cease to operate if amended
otherwise than in accordance with some agreed
mechanism for obtaining
consensus.��
32
The unanswered questions of construction make
one thing clear.� Any use of the referral power must be underpinned
by clear
agreement between States and Commonwealth as to the mechanisms for termination
and amendment of laws made pursuant to the
referral.� Moreover when referral is
called in aid of the implementation of national policy such as the National
Competition Policy
it would ordinarily be essential that all of the States are
party to it.� The Commonwealth can make laws under a referral by some
States
(not joined in by others) which would apply to some parts of Australia and not to others.� When considering implementation
of a National Competition
Policy this would seem to be an unacceptable outcome.� On the other hand, there
are aspects of National
Competition Policy, exemplified by the National
Electricity Market, where geographical realities meant that in its early stages
Western Australia and the Northern Territory had not formed part of it.�
The Trade Practices Act and State
laws
33
The TPA is a law of the Commonwealth.� It
prevails over inconsistent State laws which are invalid to the extent
of the
inconsistency.� Inconsistency may be direct or indirect.� Direct inconsistency
exists where one law requires what the other
forbids, where a State law imposes
an obligation greater than that for which the federal law provides or where the
State law would
qualify or impair or, in a significant respect, negate the
essential scheme of the federal law.[28]��
It also exists where one statute takes away a right conferred by another. [29]
34
Indirect inconsistency arises when the
Commonwealth law is intended to deal exhaustively with a particular subject
and
the State law purports to deal with that subject also.[30]� If the Commonwealth
Parliament had intended, in the TPA, to provide exhaustively for consumer
protection and anti-competitive conduct
then it could only have done so with
respect to the entities and conduct covered by its legislative powers under the
Constitution.� It could not exhaustively deal with the conduct of natural
persons, unincorporated associations, State government and incorporated
bodies
not falling within the classes of foreign, trading or financial corporations
referred to in s 51(xx).�
35
It was made clear from the outset by s 75 of the
TPA that Pt V was not intended to exclude or limit the concurrent operation of
any laws of a State or Territory.� The validity of s 75 was upheld and its
statement of legislative intent relied upon to support the conclusion that Pt V
was non-exhaustive in R v Credit Tribunal; Ex parte General Motors
Acceptance Corporation.[31]�
But as the Court observed in that case a section which declares that an Act
or part of an Act is intended to be exhaustive or non-exhaustive
will not be
determinative if the Act will not bear the corresponding characterisation.[32]�� A fortiori, the absence of a
s 75 equivalent in Pt IV would not require it to be treated as an exhaustive
code on anti-competitive
conduct.
36
Part IV contains no purported exclusion of State
law. As noted earlier, there were State laws dealing with anti-competitive
conduct at the time the TPA was enacted. However as Donald and Heydon wrote in
1978:
There are very few
State Acts on the subjects covered by Part IV of the Act; even where they
provide remedies,
there has been virtually no success in enforcement action.[33]
There was, on the other hand, a host of State laws dealing with consumer
protection matters.� However their coverage was not uniform
and there were
differing enforcement records.[34]
37
When the TPA was enacted there were
constitutionally mandated gaps in its coverage both in relation to
anti-competitive
conduct and in relation to consumer protection.� Subsequently,
by a process of cooperative action by Commonwealth, State and Territory
parliaments, a more comprehensive national coverage was achieved, albeit by a
patchwork of laws and adoption arrangements.� It is
now appropriate to consider
that process and where it is today.
Cooperation on fair trading
38
1987 saw an efflorescence of legislative
cooperation between the Commonwealth and the States.� It saw the implementation
of the ill-fated scheme to allow cross vesting of cases between Federal and
State courts.� It also saw the enactment by the States
of Fair Trading Acts
which largely replicated the provisions of Pt V of the TPA but applied them
directly to �persons�, a term which
included natural persons.� However those statutes
were not uniform.� While they all replicated Pt V of the TPA some contained
additional
consumer protection provisions.� The Fair Trading Acts gave
effect to an agreement reached in June 1983 at a meeting of Commonwealth and
State Consumer Affairs Ministers that there should
be uniform fair trading laws
throughout Australia.� It does not appear that there was any formal
inter-governmental agreement beyond
that.[35]
The Competition Principles Agreement,
Conduct Code Agreement and Implementation Agreement
39
A major initiative towards a cooperative
approach to a national competition policy was taken by the Commonwealth,
State
and Territory governments in October 1992 when they agreed to establish an
Independent Committee of Inquiry into a National
Competition Policy for Australia.� This was the Hilmer Committee.� The Committee reported in August 1993 with six
principal recommendations:
1.�������� The TPA be extended to
unincorporated businesses and State and Territory government businesses.
2.�������� Prices surveillance be extended
to State and Territory government businesses.
3.�������� Competitive neutrality
principles be applied so that government businesses would not enjoy a
competitive advantage
by reason of public sector ownership.
4.�������� Public sector monopoly
businesses be restructured.
5.�������� Legislation restricting
competition be reviewed.
6.�������� Provision be made for
third party access to nationally significant infrastructure.
40
At its meeting on 25 February 1994 the Council
of Australian Governments (COAG) accepted the Competition
Policy Principles set
out in the Hilmer Report.� In its communiqu� issued following the meeting COAG
stated that it had agreed
that:
1.�������� any recommendation or
legislation arising from the Hilmer Report would be applicable to all bodies
including Commonwealth
and State government agencies and authorities.
2.�������� that the Trade Practices
Commission and the Prices Surveillance Authority would be merged to become
known as the
Australian Competition and Consumer Commission.� The Commission
would have new powers.� Commonwealth, State and Territory governments
were to
develop detailed arrangements for its establishment including a process for
State and Territory participation in
the appointments to the Commission.
3.�������� State, Territory and
Commonwealth governments would commence work jointly on the new legislation
with a view to
considering it in August 1994.
4.�������� State, Territory and
Commonwealth governments would establish by a report to the next COAG meeting
the practical
implications of applying the Hilmer Report.
5.�������� the Commonwealth would
consider assistance to the States and Territories for loss of monopoly rents
and a process
for managing adjustment.
6.�������� the broadened application
of the TPA would require changes to some existing State and Territory
regulatory arrangements
and business practices.� While a two year transitional
period had been recommended by the Hilmer Report, officials would explore
ways
in which the States and Territories could be provided with a capacity beyond
that period to authorise or temporarily
exempt particular conduct, practices or
arrangements on a case by case basis.�
41
The National Competition Council has described
the principles set out in the communiqu� as forming the basis
of three
intergovernmental agreements made in April 1995 which established Australia�s National Competition Policy.[36]�
The three agreements were:
1.�������� The Competition Principles Agreement
2.�������� The Conduct Code Agreement
3.�������� The Agreement to
Implement the National Competition Policy and Related Reforms (Implementation
Agreement)
42
The object of the Competition Principles
Agreement was stated in its Preamble:
AND WHEREAS the
Parties intend to achieve and maintain constant and complementary competition
laws and policies
which will apply to all businesses in Australia regardless of ownership.
The Agreement was not a model of legal drafting excellence.� It was
a political document, not a legal one.[37] It began with an interpretation provision in cl 1.� Clause 2 provided for
�Prices Oversight of Government Business Enterprises�
and assigned primary
responsibility for it to the State or Territory that owned the relevant
enterprise.� A commitment to consider
the establishment of �independent sources
of price oversight where these do not exist� was made in cl 2(3).
43
Clause 3 set up the Competitive Neutrality
Policy and stated its objective:
The objective of
competitive neutrality policy is the elimination of resource allocation
distortions arising out of
the public ownership of entities engaged in
significant business activities: Government businesses should not enjoy any net
competitive advantage simply as a result of their public sector ownership.�
These principles only apply to the business
activities of publicly owned
entities not to the non-business, non-profit activities of these entities.
Each of the parties to the agreement was free to determine its own
agenda for the implementation of competitive neutrality principles.�
Corporatisation rules were to be adopted where appropriate for government
business enterprises.� Such enterprises were to be
subject to:
(i)�������� full Commonwealth, State and Territory taxes or tax
equivalent systems;
(ii)������� debt guarantee fees
directed towards offsetting the competitive advantages provided by government
guarantees;
and
(iii)������ those regulations to
which private sector businesses are normally subject, such as those relating to
the protection
of the environment, and planning and approval processes, on an
equivalent basis to private sector competitors.
Clause 4 provided for the structural reform of public monopolies.�
Before introducing competition to a sector traditionally supplied
by a public
monopoly the party controlling it would remove from the monopoly any
responsibilities for industry regulation (cl
4(2)).
44
Clause 5 of the Competition Principles Agreement
provided for a review of legislation and stated its guiding principle
thus:
The guiding principle is that legislation (including Acts, enactments,
Ordinances or regulations) should not restrict competition
unless it can be
demonstrated that:
(a)������� the benefits of the restriction
to the community as a whole outweigh the costs; and
(b)������ the objectives of the
legislation can only be achieved by restricting competition.
45
Clause 6 dealt with access to services provided
by means of �Significant Infrastructure Facilities�.� The Commonwealth
was to
prepare legislation to establish a regime for third party access to services
provided by means of such facilities where:
(a)������� it would not be economically feasible to duplicate the
facility;
(b)������� access to the service
would be necessary in order to permit effective competition in a downstream or
upstream market;
(c)������� the facility was of
national significance having regard to its size, its importance to
constitutional trade or
commerce or its importance to the national economy; and
(d)������� the safe use of the
facility by the person seeking access could be ensured at an economically
feasible cost and,
if there were a safety requirement, appropriate regulatory
arrangements exist.
There was a saving for States or Territories where there was in
place an access regime which covered the facility and conformed
to the
principles set out in cl 6.� This exemption did not apply where the National
Competition Council determined the regime
was ineffective having regard to the
influence of the facility beyond the jurisdictional boundary of the State or
Territory or
where substantial difficulties would arise from the facility being
situated in more than one jurisdiction.�
46
Clause 7 applied the principles set out in the
Competition Principles Agreement to local government with each
State and
Territory party taking responsibility for that application of those
principles.�
47
The National Competition Council was defined in
the interpretation clause as that established by the TPA.� By
cl 8 the Commonwealth
undertook responsibility for funding it.� Under cl 9 an appointment to the
Council was subject to a majority
of the States and Territories supporting the
proposed appointee.� The Agreement was to be reviewed after five years
operation (cl
15).�
48
The second of the three agreements was the
Conduct Code Agreement.� Its stated objective was as for the Competition
Principles Agreement.� It referred to the Competition Code which replicated Pt
IV of the TPA and was defined by reference to the
then foreshadowed:
Schedule version of Part IV of the TPA, ancillary
provisions and regulations under that Act relevant to the Schedule version and
remaining provisions of the Act.�
49
The Conduct Code Agreement contemplated that
State or Territory Parliaments might make laws exempting certain
conduct from
the application of Pt IV of the TPA and the Competition Code in reliance upon s
51 of the TPA.� The party responsible
for the legislation would be required to
send written notice of it to the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission
within 30
days of the legislation being enacted or made.� Clause 2 contemplated
a report from the National Competition Council on the costs
and benefits of the
legislation and on whether the Commonwealth should make regulations for the
purposes of s 51(1B)(f) of the TPA.�
50
Under the Conduct Code Agreement the
Commonwealth took responsibility for funding the Australian Competition and
Consumer Commission. There was a consultative process relating to appointments
to the Commission. �As with the Council, a person
could not be appointed as a
chairperson, deputy chairperson or member of the Commission unless a majority
of the fully participating
jurisdictions supported, or were taken to support,
the appointment.
51
Importantly, the parties agreed that the
Competition Code text should be applied by way of �application legislation
to
all persons within the legislative competence of each State and Territory�.[38] �That is to say, it
contemplated the adoption by the States of common form laws.� The Agreement
attempted to avoid the development
of differences following the initial
adoption. Clause 6 (1) provided:
It is the intention
of the Parties that where modifications are made to provisions of either Part
IV of the Trade Practices Act or of the Schedule Version of Part IV of that
Act, similar modifications will be made to corresponding provisions of the
other.
The Commonwealth committed to consulting with other parties before
putting forward for parliamentary consideration any modification
of Pt IV of
the TPA or to the Competition Code.� At the conclusion of such consultation,
the Commonwealth was required to
call a vote on the proposed amendments by
sending a notice to each party.� It would have two votes, and each of the other
parties would have one.� The Commonwealth would also have the casting vote.�
The Commonwealth agreed not to put forward for parliamentary
consideration an
amendment to the Competition Code text unless a majority of the votes of the
Commonwealth and the other parties
supported the amendment.
52
The third agreement was the Implementation
Agreement.� Under that Agreement the Commonwealth committed itself
to making
national competition policy payments to each State and Territory in the period
1997-1998 to 2005-2006 if that State and
Territory had made satisfactory
progress against their obligations under the National Competition Principles
and related reforms.�
Legislative implementation of the
Competition Principles Agreement and the Conduct Code Agreement
53
Legislative implementation of the Competition
Principles Agreement and the Conduct Code Agreement at the Commonwealth
level
was effected by the Competition Policy Reform Act 1995.� By that Act:
1.�������� The Australian
Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) was established based on the former
Trade Practices
Commission and the Prices Surveillance Commission.[39]
2.�������� The National Competition
Council was established.[40]
3.�������� The Trade Practices
Tribunal was renamed as the Australian Competition Tribunal from 6 November
1996.
4.�������� The Pt IIIA access regime
was established with effect from 6 November 1995.
5.�������� Amendments were made to
Pt IV.
6.�������� The provisions of Pt IV
and related provisions were applied to areas within State and Territory
jurisdiction.
7.�������� Amendments were made to
apply the TPA in various respects to the Crown in right of the States, the Northern Territory
and the Australian Capital Territory in so far as it carried on a
business.[41]
54
Of major importance was the provision for third
party access to facilities.� It was effected by the enactment
of the new Pt
IIIA.� Part IIIA applies to facilities of national significance.� The National
Competition Council can recommend
that a service provided by such a facility be
declared by the designated minister.� It cannot so recommend if the service is
already the subject of an effective access regime established by a State or
Territory.� Division 3 which provides for notification
and arbitration of
access disputes by the Commission, its review by the Australian Competition
Tribunal and appeals to the
Federal Court on questions of law, is limited by
reference to the corporations and trade and commerce powers.� Section 44R
provides:
This Division does
not apply in relation to a third party�s access to a service unless:
(a)������� the provider is a corporation
(or a partnership or joint venture consisting wholly of corporations); or
(b)������ the third party is a
corporation; or
(c)������� the access if (or would be) in
the course of, or for the purposes of, constitutional trade or commerce.
Part IIIA leaves intact State laws providing access regimes where
they are declared effective.� To the extent that such laws fall
outside the
scope of the corporations power and the trade and commerce power they would, in
any event, be legally effective.
55
The Competition Policy Reform Act 1995 and
successive amendments also introduced provisions into the TPA along the lines
of s 75, which itself applied only to Pt V, preserving the concurrent
operations of State and Territory laws.[42]�
56
Part XIA, the Competition Code, was introduced
to facilitate the application of the Competition Code by participating States
and Territories.[43]�
State or Territory application laws were permitted to confer functions or
powers on Commonwealth entities.[44]
57
Before the amendments the TPA did not bind the
Crown in right of the States.� The High Court so held in Bradken
Consolidated Ltd v Broken Hill Pty Co Ltd.[45]�
No intention to bind the Crown in right of the States appeared by express words
or necessary implication in the Act.� The presumption
against construing
statutes as binding the Crown was relaxed somewhat in Bropho v Western Australia[46]
but that change did not affect the constructional outcome in Bradken.[47] The
amendments to the TPA marked a significant shift in its application, albeit it
still did not bind the Crown outside the circumstances
defined by the relevant
amendments.[48]
58
Each of the States and Territories enacted
competition policy reform statutes adopting the Competition Code text.� All,
save Western
Australia, enacted their application legislation by 21 July 1996.�
Western Australia�s Act was not assented to until 31 October
1996.� It was
deemed to commence on 21 July 1996.� By way of example, s 5 of the Competition
Policy Reform (NSW) Act 1995 provided:
(1)������ The Competition Code text, as in
force for the time being, applies as a law of New South Wales.
(2)������ This
section has effect subject to s 6.
Section 6 dealt with future modifications to the Competition Code
text.� Such modifications would not apply under s 5 until at
least two months
after the date of the modification unless an earlier date is appointed by
proclamation.� This appears to
have had the effect that a law of the Parliament
of New South Wales has a content which varies, without legislative action by
the New South Wales Parliament, according to changes in the content of the
Commonwealth law.� Although the New South Wales
Act along with the other State
and Territory Acts conferred jurisdiction on the Federal Court in matters under
their Competition
Codes, that conferral, to the extent that it was made by
States, fell with the decision of the High Court in Re Wakim.[49]
59
Constitutional complications arose in relation
to the conferring upon the National Competition Council, the ACCC
and the Australian
Competition Tribunal, of powers, functions and duties under State law.� These
problems arose out of the decision
of the High Court in R v Hughes[50].� That
case concerned the conferral on the Commonwealth Director of Public
Prosecutions prosecutorial functions for offences against
the former
Corporations Law (WA), a State law.� It was authority for the propositions
that:
1.�������� A State cannot by its
laws unilaterally invest functions under such laws in officers of the
Commonwealth.
2.�������� A State law which
purports to give to a Commonwealth officer a wider power or authority than that
the acceptance
of which is prescribed by Commonwealth law would, to that extent
be inconsistent with the Commonwealth law and invalid under
s 109 of the
Constitution.[51]
60
A Commonwealth law may permit a Commonwealth
authority to exercise a non-obligatory function conferred on it by
State law.�
It does not require the support of any express Commonwealth head of power.[52]� If, however, a State law
purports to impose a duty on a Commonwealth body then it seems that the duty
must be authorised and indeed
imposed by Commonwealth law supportable by a
reference to a head of Commonwealth legislative power.� Where there is an
inter-governmental
agreement imposing duties upon Commonwealth officers to
carry out functions under State law, then a Commonwealth law imposing that
duty
is arguably an exercise of the incidental power under s 51(xxxix) in aid of the
executive power of the Commonwealth under s 61.�
61
There are a number of provisions in the TPA
relating to functions conferred upon the National Competition Council,
the Australian
Competition and Consumer Commission and the Australian Competition Tribunal
which attempt to address these problems.�
They follow a common form so it is
sufficient to go to an example.� Section 44ZZM, in Pt IIIA, deals with the
conferral of powers and functions under State or Territory access regimes on
the Commission and the Tribunal.� It
provides:
(1)������ A State or
Territory access regime law may confer functions or powers, or impose duties,
on the Commission or Tribunal.
(2)������ Subsection
(1) does not authorise the conferral of a function or power, or the imposition
of a duty, by a law of
a State or Territory to the extent to which:
(a)������� the conferral or imposition, or
the authorisation, would contravene any constitutional doctrines restricting
the
duties that may be imposed on the Commission or Tribunal; or
(b)������ the authorisation would
otherwise exceed the legislative power of the Commonwealth.
(3)������ The Commission or Tribunal cannot perform a
duty or function, or exercise a power, under a State or Territory access regime
law unless the conferral of the function of power, or the imposition of the
duty, is in accordance with an agreement between the
Commonwealth and the State
or Territory concerned.
The provision seeks to avoid constitutional limitations[53] and invokes the incidental
power by requiring that the function, power or duty conferred �is in accordance
with an agreement
between the Commonwealth and the State or Territory
concerned�.[54]
62
Section 44ZZMA plots a careful path through
constitutional thickets.� If the State can impose a duty on the Commonwealth
body, with the consent of the Commonwealth, and the duty would be consistent
with constitutional doctrines, then it will operate
by force of State law alone.[55] However, if the imposition of
the duty requires support of� Commonwealth laws then that support is made
available:
(3)������ If, to
ensure the validity of the purported imposition of the duty, it is necessary
that the duty be imposed by
a law of the Commonwealth (rather than by the law
of the State or Territory), the duty is taken to be imposed by this Act to
the
extent necessary to ensure that validity.
(4)������ If, because
of subsection (3), this Act is taken to impose the duty, it is the intention of
the Parliament to rely
on all powers available to it under the Constitution to
support the imposition of the duty by this Act.
(5)������ The duty is
taken to be imposed by this Act in accordance with subsection (3) only to the
extent to which imposing
the duty:
(a)������� is within
the legislative powers of the Commonwealth; and
(b)������ is consistent with the
constitutional doctrines restricting the duties that may be imposed on the
Commission or Tribunal.
Similar provisions are to be found in relation to the conferring of
functions on any �Commonwealth entity� under the Competition
Code as adopted by
State application laws.[56]�
The conferral of State functions under the Gas Access Law was discussed by the Full Court in Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v Australian Competition
Tribunal[57],
a judgment, an appeal from which is currently reserved by the High Court
although not on that question.
63
The form of s 44ZZMA leaves some uncertainty
about when a Commonwealth entity is discharging a duty conferred
on it by State
law alone and when it is discharging a duty conferred on it by State law and
also by operation of Commonwealth law.�
64
The question then arises whether a function
carried out by a Commonwealth body operating under State law, is amenable
to
judicial review in the exercise of federal jurisdiction.� As originally enacted
the law of each of the States applying the Competition
Code in that State also
applied Commonwealth administrative laws, including the Administrative
Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1997(Cth) (ADJR Act) as laws of the State
�to any matter arising in relation to the Competition Code of this jurisdiction
as if that Code
were a law of the Commonwealth and not a law of this
jurisdiction�.[58]�
So far as it related to the ADJR Act, the provision was linked with the
conferral of jurisdiction of the Federal Court under the
State Act.� The ADJR
Act as so applied was State law and the purported conferral of jurisdiction in
the Federal Court fell with the
decision of the High Court in Re Wakim.�
65
The Wakim problem was addressed by an
amendment to the ADJR Act itself, effected by the Jurisdiction of Courts
Legislation Amendment Act 2000.� The application of the ADJR Act was
extended beyond decisions under Commonwealth enactments to �an Act of a State,
the Australian
Capital Territory or the Northern Territory or a part of such an
Act described in Schedule 3 ��.[59]�
Schedule 3 included in its list of enactments any Act of a State or Territory
�that applies, as a law of the State [or Territory]
the text set out in Part 1
of the Schedule to the Trade Practices Act 1974 of the Commonwealth (which
forms part of what is commonly known as the Competition Code)�.� Also listed
are State and Territory laws
applying the new Tax System Price Exploitation
Code set out in Part 2 of the Schedule to the TPA.� The Gas Pipeline Access
(South Australia) Act 1997 and the National Electricity (South Australia) Act 1996 and the relevant application Acts of States or Territories
are included.�
66
The application of the ADJR Act to the gas law
was considered in Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v
Australian Competition Tribunal.[60]�
The Explanatory Memorandum to the Bill amending the ADJR Act stated that:
The amendments will
mean that where a State or Territory law confers functions or powers on a
Commonwealth officer or
authority, and the law is one of a class listed in new
Schedule 3, the Commonwealth ADJR Act will apply as Commonwealth law
to those
functions or powers.� Since the jurisdiction conferred on the Federal Court
will be federal jurisdiction, the
Federal Court will be able to undertake ADJR
review.
67
A Federal Act cannot create federal jurisdiction
in matters arising under a State law simply by saying that it
does.� In this
case what appears to be relied upon is that the repositories of the functions
conferred by the State laws are Commonwealth
bodies.� In ACCC v Australian
Competition Tribunal the Court held that it had jurisdiction because the
Tribunal, whose decision under the Gas Access Law was under review, was a Commonwealth
body.� Jurisdiction in matters in which the Commonwealth is a party can be
conferred under s 75(iii) of the Constitution.� The Court also held that it had
jurisdiction to issue constitutional writs under s 39B of the Judiciary Act
1903 (Cth).��
Related reform agreements � electricity
and gas
68
In 1989 the Industry Assistance Commission
delivered a report to the Commonwealth Treasurer in which the gas and
electricity industries were described as particularly inefficient.[61]� In 1989 the Treasurer asked
the newly formed Industry Commission to report on institutional or regulatory
or other arrangements,
subject to influence by governments, which led to
inefficient resource use in the electricity and gas sectors and to advise how
such
inefficiencies might be reduced or removed.� This led to a report in 1991
which concluded that there was an urgent need for reform
of the electricity and
gas sectors.[62]�
The primary source of inefficiency was said to be the lack of commercial
discipline imposed by competition.�
69
A Special Premiers� Conference was held in 1991
involving the Commonwealth and the heads of all States and Territories
apart
from Western Australia and the Northern Territory.� At that conference it was
agreed that a National Grid Management Council
(NGMC) be established to
consider arrangements for an interstate electricity network.� The Council was
to prepare a draft protocol
which would cover the planning, operation,
development, monitoring and extension of the eastern and southern Australian
electricity
grid.[63]
70
In May 1992 the COAG was established and the
NGMC was asked to submit its recommendations to that body.� It proposed
the
establishment of a competitive national market in the trading of electricity
and made recommendations about features of that
market including:
1.�������� Direct customer to generator access.
2.�������� Non-discriminatory access to the interconnected
transmission network.
3.�������� Absence of barriers to
interstate trade or to entry for new participants in generation or retail
supply.
4.�������� Uniform trading rules
across south and eastern Australian ESI.[64]
The recommendations of the Hilmer Inquiry came a few months after
those of the NGMC.
71
Under the Implementation Agreement, concluded between
Australian heads of government following the Hilmer Inquiry,
it was made a
condition of Commonwealth competition payments to the States and Territories
that they effectively implement all COAG
agreements on electricity arrangements
through the National Grid Management Council and the National Framework for
Free and Fair
Trade in Gas.
72
The National Electricity Market Legislation
Agreement was entered into in May 1996 between New South Wales, Victoria,
Queensland, South Australia and the Australian Capital Territory.� Each agreed
to enact a National Electricity Law (NEL) with South
Australia as the lead
jurisdiction.� The NEL was a schedule to the National Electricity (South Australia) Act 1996.� It was applied as a law of South Australia by s 6 of that
Act.� It was also applied and adopted as a law of Victoria, New South Wales, Queensland and the ACT.[65]
73
Under the NEL as adopted by the States,
ministers of the participating jurisdictions could approve a Code of Conduct
called the National Electricity Code as the initial Code for the purposes of
the Law.� The Code was to be supervised, administered
and enforced by the
National Electricity Market Management Corporation Ltd (NEMMCO) which was a
corporation limited by guarantee.�
The provisions of the Code were not given
the force of statute although the NEL provided for civil penalties for breaches
of the
Code.� The Code was authorised by the ACCC under s 88 of the TPA in
1997.� Those parts of it dealing with transmission and distribution
networks
were accepted as an Industry Access Code under s 44ZZAA of the TPA.�
74
The National Electricity Market (NEM) was the
designation given to the institutional arrangements for trading
electricity in Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria and South Australia.� Section 9 of the law
prohibited any person:
1.�������� From owning, controlling or
operating a generating, transmission or distribution system unless the person
was registered
as a Code participant in accordance with the Code.
2.�������� Other than NECA and NEMMCO,
from administering or operating a wholesale market for electricity generating
units or loads.
3.�������� Purchasing electricity from
NECA or NEMMCO unless the person was registered as a Code participant.
Each of the participating States and Territories in the NEM
developed complementary reforms within their own borders.� The Victorian
government decided to privatise the electricity industry in conjunction with
its competitive reforms.
75
The NEM commenced operation on 13 December
1998.� Its practical operation was described in Australian Gas Light Company
v Australian Competition and Consumer Commission.[66] �It
interacted with price control legislation in the States.� By the Electricity
Industry Act 1993 (Vic) the State Electricity Commission of Victoria was split into four functional activities for the purposes of privatisation.�
They
were generation, transmission, distribution and retail.� Restrictive cross
ownership rules were also introduced.� A licensing
regime was established under
which new privatised entities operating in the electricity supply industry in Victoria would be regulated.�
After the privatisation process was completed a new Electricity
Industry Act 2000 (Vic) was enacted.� The regulatory and licensing regime
established in 1993 was re-enacted subject to some amendments.� The
distribution
prices were set by a tariff order and by the Office of the
Regulator General under the Office of the Regulator-General Act 1994 (Vic).�
The Regulator-General�s function was taken over by the Essential Services
Commission, established under the Essential Services Commission Act 2001
(Vic).��
76
The NEM was described in a useful overview in a
report considered by COAG in April 2007.[67]�
The report stated:
The National
Electricity Market is based on an integrated and interconnected electricity
grid.� While based on the major
transmission systems within each jurisdiction,
there is a high level of interconnection with seven large capacity physical
interconnectors between regions which allow different systems to draw
electricity from each other depending upon the
prevailing demands.� � This
infrastructure is critical to the ability to operate a National Electricity Market
and allow
competition.[68]
77
In November 1997 a National Pipeline Access
Agreement was signed between the Commonwealth, State and Territory
governments.� The parties recognised that certain gas transmission pipeline
systems are natural monopolies and require regulation
in relation to the
granting and terms of access.� Under the Agreement South Australia passed a Gas Pipelines Access (South Australia) Act 1997 (SA) known as the SA Gas
Act.� Schedule 1 of the Act was entitled �Third Party Access to Natural Gas
Pipelines�.� Schedule 2 set
out the National Third Party Access Code for
Natural Gas Pipeline Systems.� The two schedules together comprised what was
called
the Access Law.� Schedule 2 by itself was referred to as �The Code�.� The
other States, the Northern Territory and the Australian
Capital Territory
passed laws which adopted the provisions of the South Australian Act and
applied the Access Law and Code as laws
of those States and Territories.� The
Commonwealth enacted the Gas Pipelines Access (Commonwealth) Act 1998
(Cth) which applied to the adjacent area, the external areas (other than
Norfolk Island and Antarctica) and the Jervis Bay territory.
78
The Code came into effect on 14 August 1998. �Under
the National Regulatory Scheme so adopted there is provision
for regulation of
access to, and use of, pipelines by �relevant regulators�.� Functions were
conferred on the ACCC.� The Code also
provided for a relevant appeal body which
could be the Australian Competition Tribunal.� The Code applied to pipelines
which are
�covered� by it.
79
Under the scheme implemented pursuant to these
arrangements, the ACCC and the Australian Competition Tribunal
were empowered
to perform functions as �relevant regulator� and �relevant appeals body� under
the Access Laws of the participating
jurisdictions.� Exercise of these
functions and powers is supported by provisions of the TPA to which reference
has already been
made.[69]
80
In June 2001 COAG established a Ministerial Council
on Energy (MCE) to provide national oversight and coordination
of energy policy
development.� It also set up an independent review of energy market directions:
The Parer Review.� On 11 December
2003 the MCE submitted to COAG the report
entitled �Reform of Energy Markets�.� The members of COAG then resolved to make
the Australian
Energy Market Agreement.� That agreement replaced the National
Electricity Market Legislation Agreement of 9 May 1996.� It also prevailed,
to
the extent of any inconsistency, over the National Gas Pipeline Access
Agreement of 27 November 1997. �The agreement confirmed
the MCE as the
�national policy and governance body for the Australian energy market including
for electricity and gas�.[70]
81
The parties to the AME Agreement agreed that the
Australian energy market institutions would comprise:
(a)������� The Australian Energy
Market Commission (AEMC) to be established as the body responsible for rule
making and energy
market development at a national level including in respect
of the National Electricity Code and the National Gas Code.
(b)������� The Australian Energy
Regulator (AER) to be established as the body responsible for economic
regulation and compliance
with the Codes of the electricity and natural gas
industries at a national level; and
(c)������� NEMMCO, which would
continue to be responsible for the day-to-day operation and administration of
both the power
system and electricity wholesale spot market in the NEM.[71]
82
Each of the parties agreed �to develop and
implement a national legislative framework for the energy market comprising
the
Australian Energy Market Legislation with uniform application and effect within
each Party�s jurisdiction�.[72]�
The Commonwealth agreed to submit to the Commonwealth Parliament legislation to
establish the AER and enable the conferring upon
it of functions and powers in
respect of electricity and gas.� It would also apply the NEL as appropriate as
a law of the Commonwealth
of Australia and confer functions and powers in
respect of electricity and natural gas on the AEMC and the AER enabling them to
exercise
those functions and powers within the jurisdiction of the
Commonwealth.� South Australia agreed to submit to its parliament legislation
establishing the AEMC and conferring powers and functions on it in respect of
electricity and natural gas.� It would confer functions
on the AER enabling it
to exercise its functions and powers in South Australia and would make
consequential amendments to the Electricity
Legislation and the Gas
Legislation.�
83
Western Australia would
submit legislation to its parliament to confer powers and functions on the AEMC,
in respect
of natural gas only, enabling the AEMC to exercise its functions and
powers in Western Australia.� At its discretion it will elect
whether to become
subject to the jurisdiction of the AEMC and the AER in respect of electricity
or of the AER in respect of natural
gas.� The position of the Northern
Territory was not unlike that of Western Australia.� Each of New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland,
Tasmania and the Australian Capital Territory agreed to submit to
its parliament implementing legislation to confer powers on both
the AEMC and
the AER in respect of electricity and natural gas.� Amendments to the
legislation could only be made with the agreement
of the MCE.[73]
84
The Trade Practices Amendment (Australian
Energy Market) Act 2004 No 108 of 2004 introduced a new Pt IIIAA to the Act
and established the AER.[74]�
The AER was given any function conferred under a law of the Commonwealth or
prescribed by regulation.[75]�
Part IIIAA contained provisions consenting to the conferral of future powers
and duties conferred on the AER by State and Territory
Energy Laws.� These
followed the format of like provisions elsewhere in the Act, to which reference
has already been made.[76]
85
The AER could apply to the Federal Court for
injunctions or penalties against persons in respect of:
(a)������� a uniform energy law applied as a law of the
Commonwealth;
(b)������� a State or Territory energy law.
The term �Uniform Energy Law� refers to the South Australian
Electricity Legislation and other State or Territory laws which relate
to
energy or are prescribed by regulation.[77]�
The South Australian Energy Legislation means the National Electricity Law set
out in the schedule to the National Electricity (South Australia) Act 1996
as in force from time to time together with rules and regulations made under
it.[78]
86
The AEMC was established under South Australian
legislation, namely the Australian Energy Market Commission Establishment
Act 2004 (SA).� There were amendments in 2006.
87
The Australian Energy Market Agreement was
amended by COAG in June 2006.� The amendments were designed to provide
for:
.���������� Transfer of retail and distribution regulation (other
than retail pricing) to a national framework in an agreed timeframe;
.���������� Agreement to implement national distribution and
retail functions in new national laws by 1 January 2008;
.���������� Agreement of the longer term funding arrangements for
the National Energy Institutions;
.���������� A process for providing advice to jurisdictions on
the effectiveness of competition in retail markets;
.���������� Arrangements for the certification of energy access
regimes on a nationally consistent basis.[79]
88
A new legal structure was also agreed
consistently with the change in governance arrangements for economic regulation
in the industry.� These changes were summarised in the Statement of Scope by
the Standing Committee of Officials.� The legal framework
for economic
regulation in both electricity and gas was modified to consist of:
.���������� The law (National Electricity Law (NEL) and National
Gas Law (NGL)), to be modified by parliaments, consistent with the processes
set out in the AEMA;
.���������� Statutory rules (National Electricity Rules (NER) and
National Gas Rules (NGR)) initially made by the South Australian Energy
Minister
on the recommendation of the MCE, with the AEMC being responsible for
the Rules and the amendment process in accordance with the
procedure set out in
the NEL and NGL;
.���������� Regulations under the NEL and NGL, limited to minor
process and procedural matters in the NEL and NGL and the prescription of civil
penalties;
.���������� Statements of policy principle from the MCE to the
AEMC subject to the procedures set out in the NEL and NGL.� Access related
parts
to those instruments were to be submitted for certification under Pt IIIA
of the Trade Practices Act 1974 through coordinated and concurrent State and
Territory applications.[80]
89
�The current operation of the NEM is helpfully
described in the National Overview Report to COAG on Australia�s
Infrastructure
dated April 2007:
The Australian Energy
Market Agreement (AEMA) of 2004 and its June 2006 amendments outline the current
governance framework
for the australian energy market institutions, including
the Ministerial Council on Energy, the Australian Energy Regulator and
the
Australian Energy Market Commission.
The Ministerial
Council on Energy (MCE) comprising Commonwealth, State and Territory Ministers
with responsibility for energy,
provides national oversight, leadership and
coordination of policy development to address the opportunities and challenges
facing Australia�s energy sector.� The Council is supported by a Standing
Committee of Officials from all jurisdictions and
a large number of
inter-jurisdictional working groups.
The Australian Energy
Regulator (AER) now undertakes the economic regulation of electricity
transmission networks in the NEM
and is expected to assume a similar role in
relation to electricity distribution networks from 2007.� It also monitors the
operation of the wholesale electricity market.
Economic regulation
of electricity networks in Western Australia and the Northern Territory (which
are not members of the
NEM) and any regulation of retail electricity prices in
other jurisdictions continues to be undertaken by State and Territory
regulatory agencies.� All jurisdictions in the NEM, except Queensland which
will do so from July 2007 and Tasmania with a
conditional time line of 2010,
have moved to fully competitive retail trading.�
The Australian Energy
Market Commission (AEMC) undertakes rule making and market development in the
NEM.� �The AEMC is a national
body established under the Australian Energy Market Commission Establishment Act 2004 (South Australia).
NEMMCO administers
and manages the wholesale exchange in the NEM and is responsible for developing
the market and continually
improving its efficiency�[81]
90
Changes to the TPA pursuant to the amended
agreement were effected by the Energy Legislation Amendment Act 2006 (No
60 of 2006).�
Ongoing energy reform
91
The ongoing pace of energy market reform casts an
air of contingency over current institutional arrangements for
competitive
markets.� At its meeting in February 2006, COAG recommitted to the broad
ranging reforms implemented by the MCE and set
up the Energy Reform Implementation
Group (ERIG) to develop proposals for:
.���������� Achieving a fully national
electricity transmission grid;
.���������� Measures that may be necessary to address structural issues
affecting the ongoing efficiency and competitiveness of the electricity
sector;
.���������� Any measures needed to
ensure transparent and effective financial markets to support energy markets.
92
ERIG reported to COAG in January 2007.[82]� It commissioned consultants
to prepare reports on various aspects of the electricity market.[83]� None of the reports however appear
to have addressed the efficiency of the Commonwealth/State legislative
arrangements in place
pursuant to the Australian Energy Market Agreement.
93
In its response to the ERIG report COAG affirmed
its confidence in the new energy market governance arrangements
created in
2004-05.� It endorsed recommendations from ERIG to further improve energy
market governance through:
.���������� Establishing a National
Energy Market Operator (NEMO)
.���������� Ensuring the governance arrangements for the NEMO would involve
market participants in board appointment processes
.���������� Introducing a national transmission planning function
.���������� Strengthening
the commitment to energy market reforms through a requirement for the MCE to
report annually on progress
in implementing such reforms to the COAG Reform
Council
COAG agreed to establish a single industry funded NEMO for both
electricity and gas �.. to strengthen the national character of
energy market
governance�.� It also noted that the MCE had made progress in considering the
establishment of a national Gas Market
Operator (GMO).� The GMO, if
established, would be expected to subsume gas market functions of BEM Corp, the
Gas Market Company
(GMC) and the Retail Energy Market Company (REM Co) and to
take responsibility for the operation of a bulletin board and short
term
trading market for gas.�
94
ERIG observed that the national character of the
energy market would be improved if Western Australia and the
Northern Territory
energy markets were administered by the AER, AEMC and NEMMCO.� The Australian
Energy Market Agreement, as noted
above, allows for WA and the Northern Territory to adopt the national institutions at their discretion.� New market
arrangements
have recently commenced in Western Australia.� COAG was of the
view that those arrangements need time to settle.� It also noted that
the Northern Territory has agreed to review adoption of national institutions for its market by
the end of 2007.� Governments of
Western Australia and the Northern Territory
indicated that they would monitor the outcome of local and national energy
market developments
on an ongoing basis and consider the adoption of national
institutions consistent with the AEMA.�
From horizontal arrangement to vertical
integration
95
The ongoing development of the national energy
market in both electricity and gas relies upon a complex array
of
inter-jurisdictional laws.� Institutions are established to support the
operation of the market exercise functions conferred on
them by Commonwealth,
State and Territory laws. �The legislation leaves open some uncertainty about
the circumstances in which institutions
are exercising State or Commonwealth
functions. Questions may also arise about whether the Federal Court is in some
cases being called
on to enforce a State law outside the framework of federal
jurisdiction.�
96
The evolution of the NEM seems to be progressing
towards horizontal regulatory �integration and is not likely
to be reversed.�
It would be a small step in concept but possibly a larger step in efficiency if
the States were simply to refer
to the Commonwealth for the purpose of making
comprehensive federal energy market laws.� Safeguards against unilateral
amendment
and any erosion of State or Territory involvement in the oversight of
the market could be built into a text reference as suggested
earlier in this
paper.� The administration of laws passed pursuant to the referral could
continue within the framework of an inter-governmental
agreement that would
look very much like the Australian Energy Market Agreement and be subject to
the continuing oversight of the
MCE and of COAG.�
97
In the search for efficiency, it is necessary to
be concerned as much with the complexity and transaction costs
associated with
legislative schemes as well as with� substantive reforms.�
Postscript � international agreements
98
This paper has been concerned with cooperative
arrangements between Commonwealth, States and Territories in the
development of
National Competition Policy.� These arrangements, as noted at the outset, are
made to overcome boundary issues arising
from the allocation of legislative
power under the Constitution.� No separate consideration has been given to the
effect of international agreements.� The Commonwealth has power under s 51 to
make laws with respect to external affairs.� The enactment of domestic
legislation to give effect to international treaty obligations
is a well
recognised aspect of that power.� In this context it is notable that the
Australia-United States Free Trade Agreement makes
provision, in Chapter 14,
for competition-related matters.�
99
In a guide to the Agreement published by the
Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade it is pointed out that the
competition-related matters chapter permits the parties to take measures to:
.���������� proscribe anti-competitive business
conduct;
.���������� cooperate in the area of
competition policy and law enforcement;
.���������� ensure that monopolies and government enterprises do not abuse their
position in the marketplace; and
.���������� enhance
cooperation between government agencies in both countries in the area of
consumer protection.
It is said that these objectives recognise that business conduct
which is anti-competitive or that defrauds, deceives or misleads
consumers has
the potential to restrict financial trade and� investment in addition to impairing
the welfare of the citizens
of either country.
100
Time does not permit a detailed consideration of
the provisions of Chapter 14 of the Agreement.� They appear however
to be
comprehensive and raise the question whether, and to what extent, they would
support comprehensive Commonwealth legislation
unconstrained by the limits of
the powers upon which the TPA itself currently relies.� That is perhaps the
topic for another day.
[1]�� Sawer G, Modern Federalism (Pitman, 1976) p 2
[4]�� Constantine L, Anti Trust Federalism, (29 Washburn LJ,
1989-1990) p 163; Millon D, The First Anti Trust Statute (29 Washburn LJ,
1989-1990) p 141; Majoras DG, Anti Trust and Federalism � Address to New
York State Bar Association, 23 January 2003; Posner R, �Federalism
and the Enforcement of Anti Trust Laws by State Attorneys-General� �in
Epstein RA and Greve MS (eds); Competition Laws in Conflict (AEI Press,
2004) p 252; De Bow M, �State Anti Trust Enforcement: Empirical Evidence and a
Modest Reform Proposal� in Epstein and
Greve, op cit, p 267
[5]�� Middleton K, Blackstone�s UK & EC Competition Documents (4th
Ed, Oxford University Press, 2006) p 262
[15]�� Profiteering Prevention Acts of 1920 and 1923 (Qld), the Monopolies
Act 1923 (NSW), the Fair Prices Act 1924 (SA) and the Prices Act
1963( SA), the Unfair Trading and Profit Control Act 1956 (WA) and
the Trade Associations Registration Act 1919 (WA)
[17]�� Walker G. de Q. , Australian Monopoly Law: Issues of
Law, Fact and Policy (Melbourne, FW Cheshire Pty Ltd, 1967) p 35
[18]�� Strickland v Rocla Concrete Pipes Pty Ltd �(1971) 124 CLR
468
[20]�� Re Wakim; Ex parte McNally (1999) 198 CLR 511
[25]� R v The Public Vehicles Licensing Appeals Tribunal; Ex parte
Australian National Airways Pty Ltd [1964] HCA 15; (1964) 113 CLR 207 at 224-225 where the
High Court appears to proceed on the assumption that the referral of a specific
Bill will support a law made
in the terms of that Bill.
[27]�� Airlines of New South Wales 113 CLR at 38, 30 and 53 and
see Anderson R, Reference of Powers by the States to the Commonwealth �[1951] UWALawRw 1; (1951)
2 UWAL Rev 1, 7-8; �Lumb RV and Moens G ,The Constitution of the
Commonwealth of Australia Annotated (6th ed, Sydney,
Butterworths, 1995)� at [400]; cf Wynes WA, Legislative, Executive and
Judicial Powers in Australia (5th ed, Law Book Co, 1976) at 171
[28]�� Telstra v Worthing(1999) 197 CLR 61 at 76
[32]�� R v Credit Tribunal; Ex parte General Motors Acceptance Corporation
at 563 (Mason J)
[33]�� Donald BG and Heydon JD, Trade Practices Law (Law Book Co,
1978) at 1.2.1 citing the following statutes: NSW: Monopolies Act 1923;
Consumer Protection Act 1969; Restraints of Trade Act 1976; Vic: Collusive
Practices Act 1965; Qld: Profiteering Prevention Act 1948; SA: Prices
Act 1963; WA: Trade Associations Regulations Act 1959; Trade Union Act
1902.
[34]�� Donald and Heydon, op cit at 1.2.2.
[35]�� Personal communication: Dr J Thompson, Attorney-General�s Office,
Western Australia
[36]� National Competition Council, Compendium of National
Competition Policy Agreements �(2nd ed, June 1998) �p 12
[37]�� The principles are however given statutory recognition in ss 44H,
44G, 44M and 44N of the TPA.� They must be applied by the National
Competition
Council and the Minister in deciding whether an access regime is an effective
access regime.� By s 44DA they have the
status of guidelines rather than
binding rules.�
[38]�� Conduct Code Agreement cl� 5(1)
[41]�� Sections 2B (Pt IV, VB, XIB), 44E (Pt IIIA), 95D (Pt VIIA), 152AD
(Pt XIC).
[42]�� Section 51AAA � Pt IV; s 51AAACA � Pt IVA unconscionable conduct
enacted in 2001; s 51AEA � Pt IVB industry codes enacted in 2001.
[48]�� Where s 2B did not apply Crown immunity remained in place: Northern
Territory Power Generation Pty Ltd v Power and Water Authority (2004) 219 CLR
90; Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v Baxter Health Care Pty
Ltd [2006] FCAFC 128; (2006) 153 FCR 574, appeal pending in High Court; Lin v State Rail
Authority of New South Wales [2003] FCA 1345.
[49]�� (1999) 198 CLR 511
[56]� �TPA ss 150F, 150FA and 150FB
[58]�� Competition Policy Reform (NSW) Act 1995 s 30
[61]�� Industries Assistance Commission, Government (Non tax) Charges
(Vol 1, 1989)
[62]�� Industry Commission Energy Generation and Distribution� (Vol 1,
1999) at p 2
[63]�� Special Premiers� Conference Communique, 30-31 July 1991
[64]�� National Grid Management Council, National Electricity Market and
Common Trading Arrangements, An Information Paper, January 1993.
[67]�� Australia�s Infrastructure � National Overview� Report, April
2007
[68]�� Australia�s Infrastructure, op cit, at 24
[69]�� TPA ss 44ZZM, 44ZZMA and 44ZZMB
[70]�� Australian Energy Market Agreement, Art 4.1
[71]�� Australian Energy Market Agreement, Art 5
[72]�� Australian Energy Market Agreement, Art 6.2
[73]�� Australian Energy Market Agreement, Art 6.5
[76]�� TPA ss 44AI, 44AJ and 44AK
[79]�� A National Legislative Framework for Gas and Electricity, July
2006.� Statement of Scope, Standing Committee of Officials of the
Ministerial
Council on Energy
[80]�� Standing� Committee of Officials, op cit, at 7
[81]�� Australia�s Infrastructure, National Overview Report, April 2007
at 28
[82]�� Energy Reform � The Way Forward for Australia; A Report to the
Council of Australian Governments by the Energy Reform Implementation
Group,
January 2007.
[83]�� The Effectiveness of the Trade Practices Act to Guide Mergers in
the Australian Electricity Market; Acacia� CRE Pty Ltd, 22 November 2006; Review
of Energy Related Financial
Markets Electricity Trading, KPMG, 2006; Evaluation
of Economic Benefits of Reform, Final Report to Electricity Reform
Implementation
Group, McLennan Magasanik Associates, 8 January 2007; NEMCO
Governance Arrangements Final Report, Firecone Ventures Pty Ltd, December
2006.
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