If you can read this text, your browser is not interpreting this page as the designers intended. This may be because you are using an obsolete, non-standards compliant browser or you have Cascading Style Sheets disabled. Read more about Web Standards at Reactive.

text size: A- A+

The Briefing

Start up Guide Smart Co Awards Smart co blogs
Govt assist Govt assist Links Our Partners New Products

Email Alert

Sign up to receive an email each weekday alerting you to the latest news, tips, blogs, trends and big issues

More information
RSS feeds Podcasts

Small business collective bargaining failure

Friday, 14 December 2007

After 12 months of the operation of the new streamlined authorisation process for collective bargaining by small business, only six notifications have been made. Three were allowed to stand, two were rejected and one remains under consideration.

It’s a weak result from Trade Practices Act amendments that promised to give small businesses bargaining power in industries with large customers, competitors or suppliers.

A lecturer in the Faculty of Law at the University of Sydney, Shae McCrystal, points out in a column published in a national newspaper yesterday that if the ALP is serious about counteracting inequality of bargaining power for small businesses it must revisit the concept of public benefit in the TPA notification process.

She explains that in deciding whether a collective bargaining arrangement is lawful, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission must weigh the public benefit to be gained from the proposed conduct against the likely competition among members of the collective.

Public benefit means consumer benefit; not any private benefit to be gained by correcting a power imbalance.

She points out that this is incredibly difficult to prove, in part because in the trade practices context the underlying assumption is that all individual operators are equal.

McCrystal argues that the ACCC should at least include, in its consideration of public benefit, consideration of the private welfare of the members of the bargaining unit.


More articles from The Briefing

  • New chief for Franchise Council
  • Unwanted Christmas kiss sparks dispute
  • Life long learning is lucrative
  • Broadband wars hot up
  • Retail tenancy leases public hearings set down for February
  • Bank billion dollar bailout: Economy round-up
  • TOP OF PAGE