Install

Get the latest updates as we post them — right on your browser

Today's paper. Last Updated: 02/14/2012

Putin Orders Action on Antitrust Bill

Senior senators, including Sergei Mironov, center, listening to Putin at his Novo-Ogaryovo residence Tuesday.
government.ru

Senior senators, including Sergei Mironov, center, listening to Putin at his Novo-Ogaryovo residence Tuesday.


Prime Minister Vladimir Putin vented his frustration Tuesday to a group of top senators over delays in the parliament on passing a bill that would ensure criminal penalties for unfair competition.
The government is hoping that harsher anti-monopoly regulation, which now operates through a system of fines, will help it pull the economy out of a slump. The Federal Anti-Monopoly Service has been unable to apply criminal punishments so far, saying that part of the law is too vague.
A bill that would offer greater clarity about what constitutes unfair competition has been stuck in the State Duma since Feb. 27, when the Cabinet submitted the legislation. Duma deputies gave the bill preliminary approval only at the end of May.
Putin demanded that the parliament adopt the bill before the end of this month, saying consultations on the Cabinet-sponsored project had taken far too long.
“This begins to look like deliberate procrastination,” he said in a meeting with five senior Federation Council members, including Speaker Sergei Mironov.
The Duma is scheduled to consider the bill in the key second reading Wednesday.
The demand to speed up the work comes a day after Federal Anti-Monopoly Service director Yury Artemyev said he asked the prime minister for help on the matter.
“We asked Vladimir Vladimirovich to help us ask the parliament to adopt [an amended] Article 178,” Artemyev said Monday, referring to the article in the Criminal Code that sets penalties for unfair competition.
The new article would stipulate prison terms of up to three years for violations of anti-monopoly law, Artemyev said.
In addition to dropping its vague language, the amended law would cover cartel collusion, which it currently does not, said Grigory Chernyshov, a partner at law firm Egorov Puginsky Afanasiev & Partners.
“It’s weird because this is the most serious violation,” said Chernyshov, who is also a member of the nonprofit Partnership for the Promotion of Competition, which was established in 2007 to advocate for better anti-monopoly regulation.
Another member of the partnership, Artur Rokhlin, a partner at the law firm Yust, said the law would make the economy less monopolized, but warned against any excesses. “The danger of arbitrary use of these provisions is not being removed,” he said.
Putin spoke a day after the Presidium, a scaled down Cabinet, discussed the state of competition in the country as described by the Federal Anti-Monopoly Service. In a state-of-affairs report that the service published on its web site Tuesday, it pointed out that state agencies accounted for almost half of the 6,540 violations that it uncovered last year.
It also said state-run corporations and a selective use of federal funds to bail out crisis-hit companies were a major hurdles for competition.
It was unclear Tuesday whether the amendments for criminal penalties would help combat the government-related competition problems. A call to the Federal Anti-Monopoly Service press office went unanswered Tuesday afternoon.

Also in Business

Rostelecom Mulls $4Bln Mobile Investment

National operator Rostelecom could invest $3 billion to $4 billion to develop mobile networks in the next four years as the state-run company seeks a bigger share of the wireless Internet market.

Grain Priced Out of Egypt Tender

Russia lost the latest wheat tender in Egypt because it offered the cereal for nearly 12 percent more than the winning bid from the United States.

Renaissance Sees Outflows Ending

Russia probably won't see net outflows of capital this year as election-related concerns subside, according to Renaissance Capital.

New Property Tax a Work in Progress

If the government's plans come to fruition, this year will be spent completing property evaluations across the country according to market-based standards, paving the way for the implementation of a new property tax, which could partially enter into force as early as 2013.

New Traffic Reduction Measures in Works

Drivers groups have reacted with anger to a radical Transportation Ministry plan that proposes making driving more expensive in a bid to lower the burden on Russia's overcrowded roads.

Power Machines Acquires EMAlliance

The country's biggest producer of electricity-generating equipment, Power Machines, will step up its efforts to compete on foreign markets, as it completed a deal Tuesday to take over another energy-industry contractor.




Discussion
The Moscow Times welcomes your comments and invites you to discuss topics with other readers. Your comment will be posted automatically to enable a live discussion. If you aren't familiar with our comments policy, you can read it here.

If you're a registered user, you can start typing your comment below. If not, take a moment to sign up. and then return to the article.

If your comment doesn't appear, contact us by using our web form.

Comments

Comments via Facebook

print


Comments

This article has no comments.

Be the first to leave a comment





Most Read