Commission releases draft report on dairy sector competition in NZ
Commission releases draft report on dairy sector competition in NZ
The Commerce Commission has today released its draft report for consultation on the state of competition in New
Zealand’s dairy industry.
The Commission began its review in June this year at the request of the Minister for Primary Industries as required
under the Dairy Industry Restructuring Act 2001 (DIRA).
Deputy Chair Sue Begg said the Commission’s draft finding is that, on balance, there is not sufficient competition at
the farm gate and factory gate to consider full deregulation at this time.
“Our primary concern is that competition in the factory gate is very limited. Without the existing regulations, Fonterra
would be able to increase the price of raw milk it sells to other domestic processors. This could in turn result in
higher retail prices for dairy products in New Zealand,” Ms Begg said.
“While there are signs of competition and growth in the farm gate market, particularly in Canterbury, Southland and
Waikato, Fonterra faces little competition as the dominant buyer of raw milk in most regional markets. However, it does
not have the ability or incentive to reduce prices to farmers in this market due its co-operative nature and constraints
from competitors.”
The Commission also concluded that Fonterra has limited ability and incentive overall to shut competitors out of dairy
markets if the regulations were removed.
The Commission’s draft report has outlined options for transitioning to deregulation in the future and resetting the
current market share thresholds that prompt a competition review. The recommendations include:
Taking a staged approach to amending the DIRA regulatory regime, beginning with a review of the Raw Milk Regulations
with an eye to allowing a factory gate market to develop
Resetting the market share thresholds in both the North and South islands to 30 percent (up from the current 20 percent)
as the trigger for a competition review of the dairy industry.
“Our analysis suggests that gradual relaxation of the Raw Milk Regulations may encourage the factory gate market to
develop. Full deregulation currently poses a potential risk to domestic competition in goods such as fresh milk and
cheese, where independent processors are dependent on regulated access to raw milk from Fonterra. Taking a staged
approach to deregulation would mitigate this risk,” Ms Begg said.
“We recognise that any changes to the regime would need to be carefully managed and welcome submissions from interested
parties. In particular we want to test the evidence on the likely costs and benefits of deregulation and whether our
recommended approach of developing a more competitive factory gate market is appropriate at this time.”
A copy of the draft report can be found here.
Submissions close at 5pm on Monday 4 December, with cross-submissions to be received by 5pm Friday 18 December.
ends