Britain's competition regulator should have an enhanced role, becoming a new consumer champion, according to an government-commissioned report led by John Penrose MP.

The Penrose Report

Mr Penrose was invited by the government in September 2020 to conduct an independent review of UK competition policy, to see how it could be reformed for the digital age post-Brexit and COVID-19. 

In particular, Mr Penrose was asked to consider how the UK's competition regime can evolve to meet the government's policy aims of promoting a dynamic, innovation-driven economy which delivers for consumers and businesses across all regions and nations of the UK, within the context of recovery from COVID-19 and the end of the transition period.

As the UK looks to forge new relationships with the EU and other international partners, the report considered the following key questions.

How can the UK's competition regime best...: 

  1. Play a central role in meeting the challenges of the post COVID-19 economy and in driving the recovery? 
  2. Contribute to the government's aim of levelling up across all nations and regions of the UK? 
  3. Increase consumer trust, including by meeting the 2019 Manifesto commitment to tackle consumer rip offs and bad business practices, and by ensuring the competition regime operates in a way which is strong, swift, flexible and proportionate? 
  4. Support UK disruptors taking risks on new ideas and challenging incumbents? 
  5. Make best use of data, technology and digital skills which are vital to the modern economy

The report was produced within an admirably swift timeframe.

So, what did the report conclude?

The report sets out its stall on the cover page, with the title "Power to the People", under which it states in a no-nonsense manner: 

"Stronger Consumer Choice And Competition

So Markets Work For People, Not The Other Way Around".

This gives the reader ample clues about the direction it takes.

The report centres on the fact that there is currently no strong, independent institution responsible for the overall progress of competition, consumer rights, supply-side reforms and productivity improvements in the UK.  "Given their importance for post-Brexit Britain's economic growth and jobs, it's an important gap in our current regime," Mr Penrose argues.

Mr Penrose believes that the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) should fulfil this role, with a focus on the twin pillars of Competition and Consumer Detriment

The report envisages the CMA "becoming a micro-economic sibling for the Bank of England's well-established public macro-economic role". It calls for the CMA's civil consumer enforcement powers to be updated, to bring them into line with its powers and weapons for dealing with competition issues.  The report suggests options both to promote competition in the UK and to improve consumer confidence, including ways to protect consumers from new kinds of "rip-offs", and to ensure that consumers can expect fair treatment, particularly in relation to online transactions, now that the UK is outside the EU.

In guarding against consumer detriment, Mr Penrose argues that "Most of our existing consumer-protection rules already work well enough and don't need to be changed. But there are three important gaps where post-Brexit Britain's legal framework still allows consumers to be ripped off, and where our protections need to be stronger: 

  • Loyalty penalties and price discrimination, where people are charged different prices for the same things. 
  • Rip-offs  hidden in the small print of long and complicated contracts that no-one has time to read. 
  • 'Nudging' people the wrong way (called 'sludge')."

Rip offs

According to the report, 'rip offs' include:

  • No visible or comparable price. Where online services have no monetary cost it's impossible to know what price we as consumers are paying with the data we are signing away, which means we can't assess the relative value of what we are receiving versus what we are giving away. Further, the report argues consumers are therefore not giving fully-informed consent when we agree to the sign-up terms. 
  • Reams of small print.  The report argues that nobody reads the small print. Consumers are asked to agree to many pages of detailed and complicated legal small print, often several times a day, and nobody has the time to give properly-informed consent. It cites a recent experiment created by a fake social networking site with terms and conditions that included giving up your first-born child as payment. Apparently 98% of people agreed to this.
  • 'Take it or leave it'. Leaving aside modern, compliant cookie consents, the report argues that there are rarely options to change or modify terms and conditions and, in a digital world where there are lots of monopolies (whether it's the only local public wifi network wherever you happen to be, or where rival social networks are too small to work half as well as the market leaders) there often isn't an acceptable or practical alternative service if a consumer doesn't like what we're being offered.  [Note from Geraint: I find cookie consents achingly dull, so adopting the same approach to website terms and conditions or online purchase terms seems... "courageous"]

Nudge and Sludge

According to the report, around 1 in 10 websites engage in 'sludgy' behaviour. It cites the following examples:

  • Subscription traps, where companies offer consumers free trials and snare them into long, expensive deals (often by making it difficult for consumers to cancel the trial)
  • Hiding or obfuscating opt out routes for added cost services (e.g. making the opt out icon smaller, less visible and/or located away from the 'opt in') 
  • Creating a sense of urgency around price or availability (e.g. number of customers looking at the same product, time clock for offers)
  • Using defaults to influence consumer behaviour (e.g. pre-ticked checkboxes for add-ons; displaying paid options more prominently.)

Enforcement reforms - a law unto itself?

The report calls for the CMA's civil consumer enforcement powers to be updated so they have the same importance as the CMA's competition law powers. This would be a significant shift from the current approach, as it would enable the CMA to investigate and make decisions about consumer law infringements, as well as imposing sanctions and penalties directly for breach of the rules, rather than doing so via the courts.

In relation to claims made on businesses' own websites (and in their advertising, marketing and social media posts), which are predominantly dealt with by the Advertising Standards Authority at present, there will inevitably be some tensions on this division of labour, and perhaps some re-drawing of remits, between those two regulators. 

If adopted, wholly or partly, it will be interesting to see where these reforms take us. It seems certain that regulatory pressure on businesses promoting and providing goods and services to UK consumers will increase. 

Businesses which currently take a relaxed approach to consumer detriment in the UK, emboldened by the ASA's lack of teeth and Trading Standards' lack of resources, might need to revisit their approach.

Status of the report

Although penned by a Conservative MP, this is an independent report, rather than a statement of Government or Conservative Party policy. The government is currently reviewing the report, and will provide its official response to it in due course, according to UK business secretary Kwasi Kwarteng.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, given that the report calls for a more powerful CMA, the CMA itself welcomed the report. Welcoming and sharing Mr Penrose's ambition for an updated competition and consumer regime, with the CMA taking a leading role on both fronts, the CEO of the CMA, Andrea Coscelli, said: "We agree that new legislation could make the competition and consumer protection regime stronger, swifter and more flexible so that we can deliver even more for UK consumers and businesses."

The full 70-page report if available, here.

Originally Published by GALA, February 2021

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