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BEIJING, May 24 (Xinhuanet) -- While continuing to
welcome the investment of transnational companies, China has learned the
negative effects of these corporate giants: curbing competition and creating
monopolies.
The fair trade bureau under China's State Administration for Industry and Commerce has recently
completed an investigation of anti-competition acts of transnational companies
in China, which finds some transnational companies are abusing their
advantageous positions to curb competition.
A report about the investigation, the first of its
kind ever undertaken by the bureau, says transnational companies command obvious
advantageous positions in their investment areas in China.
For instance, Microsoft's operating system software
and Tetra Pac packaging materials each account for 95 percent shares of the
Chinese market. Eastman Kodak, which formerly held a more than 50 percent share
of China's roll film market, is expected to further consolidate its market
dominance after having taken over 20 percent shares of its sole major Chinese
rival Lucky Film Corp.
According to the report, some transnational companies
have been using their dominant roles in technology, brand recognition, capital
and management to suppress competitors and maximize their profits.
On the eve of the release of WPS97, a set of computer
program developed by a Chinese company, a transnational company hurriedly put
forward its version of the same kind of product at much lower prices.
In addition, certain transnational companies tend to
purchase the exclusive promotion rights of supermarkets in busy seasons, barring
these supermarkets from displaying other brands.
Some transnational companies set different prices for
the same kind of products for China and their home countries, with the price in
China twice as high as that in their home country.
To ensure their dominant roles, some transnational
companies often carry out sweeping mergers and acquisitions to put major
competitors under their own flags.
"Such actions would undermine the competitive
environment of their host countries if transnational companies become
domineering forces in this way. If such things happen, an anti-monopoly law has
to be invoked to rectify the situation," said an official with the State
Administration for Industry and Commerce.
The official said that to curb the anti-competition
acts of transnational companies in China, it's imperative to quicken the
revision of the existing law against unfair competition and make an
anti-monopoly law.
Existing laws lack provisions against certain acts
that suppress competition, such as selling tie-in goods, setting unfairprices to
subdue competitors and pricing discrimination, said the official with the
administration.
Informed sources say the draft of the anti-monopoly
law is being considered by the Legislative Affairs Office of the State Council
and other relevant departments. Enditem |