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Introduction: The development of competition and regulation in southern Africa

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2018

Jonathan Klaaren
Affiliation:
professor and former dean of the School
Simon Roberts
Affiliation:
professor of economics and executive director of the Centre for Competition
Imraan Valodia
Affiliation:
professor of Economics and dean of the Faculty of Commerce
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Summary

INTRODUCTION

In March 2015, South Africa's Centre for Competition, Regulation and Economic Development (CCRED) partnered with the Zimbabwe Competition and Tariff Commission to host the inaugural Annual Competition and Economic Regulation (ACER) week at Victoria Falls in Zimbabwe. Much of the success of the week was in combining rigorous training led by regional and global experts with a conference programme that was designed with inputs from authorities in the region to make sure it was topical and directly relevant. The discussions were especially vibrant and the subject matter of particular relevance to solving the challenges of enforcement and growth for agencies in the southern African region and beyond. The papers in this volume were selected from those presented at the ACER conference, following a rigorous refereeing process.

The period since the early 1990s has seen the emergence and consolidation of competition and regulation authorities in a number of countries across the continent. This volume aims to play a role in critically analysing key competition issues and in considering the interface of competition and a range of economic policy questions. The papers we collected and edited for presentation in this volume fit into three clusters: cartel law enforcement, issues in competition and regulation, and competition and regulation in reshaping African markets. The conclusion, a substantive chapter in its own right, addresses competition and regional integration as part of an inclusive growth agenda for Africa.

The areas covered here show that there are complex and interesting developments in the competition and regulation space within the region. There is thus a clear need for an overall assessment and for measures to foster the development of a body of knowledge and literature that originates from the experiences of countries in the region, rather than relying exclusively on international precedent and learnings. One example of this is Thula Kaira's discussion in chapter 3 of the poor translation of cartel findings in South Africa into follow-on investigations and prosecution in neighbouring countries in the Southern African Customs Union and the Southern African Development Community (SADC), and ultimately into damage claims based on an assessment of the overcharge to consumers across borders.

Type
Chapter
Information
Competition Law and Economic Regulation in Southern Africa
Addressing Market Power in Southern Africa
, pp. 1 - 10
Publisher: Wits University Press
Print publication year: 2017

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