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  • 9/10/2024 10:41:41 AM
    African Competition Boards: Sitting on Their Hands While Global Oligopolies Tighten Their Grip

    African Competition Boards missing the boat or taking bribes? 

    Africa stands at a crossroads, watching as global giants like Google and Apple continue their unchecked dominance, while our competition boards seem content to stay on the sidelines. It's infuriating. At a time when competition authorities in places like the U.S. and the EU are taking bold, unprecedented steps to protect their markets from monopolistic behavior, Africa’s regulatory bodies are asleep at the wheel, allowing global oligopolies to sink their claws deeper into the continent.

    Let’s take a look at how the European Union is showing what leadership in competition law really looks like. The European Commission, led by the fierce and relentless Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager, managed to land a staggering victory against Apple. Yes, Apple—the trillion-dollar behemoth. After years of legal battles, the Court of Justice overturned a lower court decision, confirming the Commission’s €13 billion back-tax bill for Apple, which had benefitted from sweetheart tax deals in Ireland. This was not just a financial win; it was a moral victory against aggressive tax planning and the audacity of corporations that believe they’re above the law.

    Yet, here in Africa? Crickets.

    Despite being victims of these same multinational giants, our competition boards have been embarrassingly quiet. African companies are struggling, suffocated under the weight of corporate powerhouses that exploit tax loopholes, dominate digital markets, and drain our economies of billions. Our local businesses, the engines of innovation and growth, are being outcompeted not through fair play, but through sheer monopolistic might. And who’s protecting them? Certainly not our competition boards, which appear more concerned with playing nice than holding anyone accountable.

    Africa is being left behind while Europe sets an example. In the EU, the fight for fair competition is real, and the results are tangible. Apple’s back-tax bill is just one of many crackdowns on corporate giants. These victories serve as a reminder that monopolies, no matter how wealthy, can and should be challenged. European regulators are out there pulling the levers, while African competition authorities are either too timid or too disinterested to even tug at a string.

    The reality is this: Africa will continue to lose if we don’t wake up. The problem isn’t just that global oligopolies are exploiting us; it’s that we’re allowing it to happen. Our competition boards should be learning from their counterparts in the EU and the U.S., where antitrust law is taken seriously, where fines in the billions are not just symbolic but real deterrents to anti-competitive behavior.

    Look at Google, which is regularly fined by the EU for abusing its market dominance, or Amazon, which faces probes for monopolistic practices. In contrast, Google and Apple can run amok in Africa, where there are virtually no consequences for their monopolistic tactics. Are we that naive, or are our regulators simply unmotivated? Either way, it’s a disgrace.

    The European Commission’s efforts are proof that it is possible to stand up to these corporations and win. Apple’s defeat isn’t just a legal battle; it’s a signal that Europe won’t tolerate multinationals siphoning profits without paying their fair share. Yet in Africa, we’re handing these corporations our lunch money and thanking them for taking it. We’re too afraid to disrupt their operations, fearing it might hurt foreign investment. But the real damage is in allowing them to dominate without challenge.

    What’s more, Africa’s future in the digital economy is at stake. Europe has taken steps to ensure that Apple and Google’s stranglehold on app stores, digital payments, and advertising markets is checked. Meanwhile, African developers, content creators, and tech startups are struggling to even get a foothold. Without strong antitrust enforcement, there’s little hope for fair competition or the blossoming of a robust African tech ecosystem.

    If we continue to let these giants run rampant, Africa will remain a dumping ground for their products and services, never a competitor or innovator. The time for passivity is long past. Africa’s competition boards must step up, or Africa will be consigned to a future of economic subservience.

    African regulators, are you listening? If Europe can take on Apple and Google, so can we. If not, then brace yourselves for more decades of missed opportunities, stagnation, and the slow suffocation of African innovation at the hands of global oligopolies.

    Ref: TRS & ChatGPT


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