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The Cost of Antitrust Law to Malaysia’s Financial Services Sector

 |  September 7, 2014

Posted by Social Science Research Network

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    The Cost of Antitrust Law to Malaysia’s Financial Services Sector – Bryane Michael (University of Hong Kong Faculty of Law; University of Oxford; Columbia Law School – Centre for the Advancement of Public Integrity), Mark Williams (Hong Kong Polytechnic University) and Susila Munisamy (University of Malaya)

    ABSTRACT: Judging by only economic incentives, Malaysian financial institutions (particularly banks) should completely ignore the Competition Act. The data show that Malaysian banks probably benefit from anti-competitive behaviour. Political and family connections likely facilitate such behaviour. Given that the Malaysian Competition Commission will likely lack the resources to investigate and sanction anti-competitive behaviour in Malaysia’s banking industry – the banks’ best response to the Act probably consists of ignoring it. Maximum fines of 10 million ringgit and revenue-tied penalties of only 10% of worldwide revenue mean that banks still have strong incentives to engage in anti-competitive behaviour and to pay any low fine that might be levied. The best compliance programme for banks in Malaysia likely consists of actions that avoid detection rather than detecting and preventing anti-competitive behaviour. Private rights of action are unlikely to provide any stronger economic incentives for Malaysian banks to adopt strong antitrust compliance programmes and internal audit programmes. By staying the course, Malaysian banks can continue to earn about 15 billion ringgits (approximately US $4.6 billion in anti-competitive rents).