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This presentation by Russell Damtoft (US FTC) was made during a roundtable discussion on Advocacy and Mainstreaming competition policy held at the 12th meeting of the OECD-IDB Latin American Competition Forum on 16-17 September 2014, Uruguay. Find out more at www.oecd.org/competition/latinamerica/
Mainstreaming of Competition Advocacy: the United States
Experience
Russell W. Damtoft Associate Director, Office of International Affairs
U.S. Federal Trade Commission
OECD Latin America Competition Forum
Montevideo, Uruguay, September 17, 2014 The views expressed herein are those of the speaker and do not necessarily
represent the views of the Federal Trade Commission or any individual
Commissioner.
Moving from Theory to Practice
• Last year in Lima, FTC
Chairwoman Ramirez
spoke about the
importance of
addressing
anticompetitive
governmental policies.
• This year, we turn to the
practical question of
turning theory into
practice.
2
Making our Case
• How do we get competition on the
legislative and regulatory agenda?
– The theory behind advocating for pro-
competitive governmental policy is well
understood.
– But legislators and regulators must be
responsive to many stakeholders.
– Stakeholders promoting competition can
be few and far between.
3
Where do we start?
• Three steps to facilitate successful
advocacy:
– FIRST: Identify issues that are important
to consumers
– SECOND: Establish relationships with
regulators that focus on alignment of
interests with competition agencies
– THIRD: Work with regulators to identify
ways to harmonize competition with
regulatory goals 4
Step 1: Pick the Right Issues
• Cases with consumer appeal are more likely
to gain support among policymakers.
• Identify competition issues with direct and
easily understandable impacts on consumers:
price effects or diminished access to goods
and services.
• Successful advocacy in such cases can also
pave the way for advocacy in sectors where
the impact is less direct.
5
Example: Dental Therapists
• Dental therapists can offer
some dental services that
dentists provide, perhaps at
lower cost.
• A non-government body that
sets dental education
accreditation standards
considered proposals that
could restrict the ability of
therapists to practice
independently.
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• Effects would include:
– Reduced competition
– Limited access to dental
services
– Discouraged innovative
educational programs.
Example: Primary Health Care
• Advanced practice nurses can provide many basic health care services.
• Physician groups sought regulations to require nurses to affiliate with doctors.
• Effects would include: – Possible higher costs
– Limited access to services
– Particular harm to underserved populations
– Inhibit innovative methods of service delivery.
7
Example: Urban Transportation Services
• “Digital dispatch” services allow consumers to arrange and pay for transportation by smartphone application
• Taxi operators asked regulators to restrict the use of these “apps.”
• Effects would include: – reduce price competition;
– eliminate an innovative new technology.
8
Example: Real Estate Services
• Most homes sold through brokers.
• Brokers are paid a percentage of the
price (usually 6%).
• Discount brokers and Internet sites
challenge traditional brokers.
• Traditional brokers sought
requirements that would:
– Limit fee-for-service providers, or
– Require brokers to provide a full
range of service.
• Effects would include:
– Preventing brokers from unbundling
services;
– Restricting innovative forms of delivery;
– Increasing costs
9
Step 2: Build Relationships of Trust
• Regulators and competition
agencies have a common interest:
protecting the consumer.
– Regulators protect against particular
types of harm (health, safety, fraud)
– Competition promotes lower prices,
increased quality, service, and
innovation
• In principle, there is no conflict
between these goals.
– Competition agencies can help
the regulator recognize how
their interests align 10
Alignment of Interests
• The challenge is to:
– build alliances with regulators, and
– develop a shared view that competition is
consistent with regulators’ own goals, and can even
help further those goals.
• Alignment of regulator and competition agency
interests is a “win-win” outcome for consumer
welfare: benefits of competition and regulation
11
Example: Dental Therapists
12
• Dental regulators ensure
that treatment is performed
only by trained, competent
individuals.
• Competition by qualified
dental therapists can
reduce costs and make
basic dental care available
to more consumers.
• With interests aligned,
regulatory solutions can
protect consumers and
allow competition to flourish
Example: Advance Practice Nurses
13
• Regulators protect patients
from incompetent care,
unsanitary conditions,
unsafe procedures and
medicines.
• Competition from qualified
health nurses can reduce
costs and create new health
care options for consumers.
• With interests aligned,
patients received the
protection of regulatory
solutions and the benefits of
competition
Example: Urban Transportation
• Regulators are charged
with ensuring vehicle
safety, insurance, and
prevention of deceptive
practices.
• Permitting entry by firms
that offer safe but more
flexible and affordable
urban transportation
options should be
consistent with taxi
regulators’ goals.
14
Building Relationships
• Our goal is to build a culture of shared problem-
solving where the competition agency’s expertise
can complement the regulator’s sectoral
expertise:
– Start at the staff level
– Become a resource
– Attend conferences, establish liaison arrangements,
detail of staff between agencies, etc.
– Share expertise and analysis in a constructive and
mutually beneficial way fashion.
• This requires interpersonal skills as much as
competition expertise.
15
Nurture the Relationship
• Show regulators your interest in maintaining a
relationship over time and that you want to
learn about developments in the regulatory
scheme that may impact competition.
• Consider how and when to intervene: the
goal is not to publicly embarrass or
undermine support for the regulators.
– Informal (behind the scenes) versus formal
(public)
– Experience suggests greater receptivity and
success when the comment is invited.
16
Regulatory Capture
• Sometimes, regulators’ views become so closely aligned with the regulated sector that the regulator does not distinguish between industry and consumer interests.
• Alignment of interests strategy may not always work in such cases.
• In a few instances, U.S. Agencies have taken law enforcement action against regulators.
17
Step 3: Balancing Competition & Regulation
• Once suitable topics for intervention
have been identified and alliances have
been established, help the regulator to:
– Develop a framework for understanding the
impact of an anticompetitive regulation;
and
– Identify options that impose less or no
restrictions on competition while achieving
other legitimate policy goals
18
Analytical Tools
• “Because I said so” doesn’t work!
• Tools to harmonize the regulatory goal and
objectives of competition may include:
– Studies quantifying the cost of regulation;
– An analytical framework to explain the likely
effect on price and quality;
– Experience of other jurisdictions that illustrate
the potential for consumer harm; and
– Options for avoiding a negative impact while
achieving regulatory goals.
19
Example: Dental Therapy
• In the dental therapy
case, FTC staff
pointed to Australia,
where dental
therapists have
been providing
services
autonomously and
safely for years.
20
Example: Advance Practice Nursing
• FTC gathered statistics
on the harms of limited
access to healthcare in
West Virginia and
identified potentially
hidden costs of
regulation
• Cited evidence of safe
practice by advanced
practice nurses
21
Examples: Urban Transportation
• FTC staff submitted
formal comments to
regulators that:
• identified the types of
consumer harm that
might result, and
• Highlighted less
restrictive alternatives to
achieve legitimate public
interest goals
22
Example: Real Estate Services
• DOJ letter to
Montana regulators
explained how other
states had allowed
competition without
bad results
• Making cost of
regulation
transparent through
website.
23
Further resources
• OECD – Competition Assessment Toolkit
(contains tools to assist governments in evaluating new and existing draft laws)
• The International Competition Network – Recommended Practice on Competition
Assessment
– Advocacy Working Group Toolkits
– The Curriculum Project Advocacy Module
• The Inter American Competition Alliance – The Alliance has held several calls to
discuss advocacy experiences of member agencies.
24
Conclusion
• Bringing competition policy into the
mainstream of public policy is a necessary
complement to a competition advocacy
strategy.
• A significant body of work has gone into
creating such tools.
• While challenges exist, success can be
achieved when a carefully crafted and
thoughtful strategy is employed.
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