Public bodies, as well as suppliers of products and services to the public sector, need to be aware that the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) will not only take action to ensure that markets work well for consumers and businesses, but will also take action to make markets work well in the interests of the public sector. The fact that the UK government, or a public body, is the primary customer in a particular market may be a relevant factor in the CMA's decision to take enforcement action or investigate a market. Action by the CMA can lead to substantial savings for the government and, ultimately, taxpayers.
In recent years, there have been several competition investigations involving the pharmaceutical sector where the CMA has imposed significant fines for competition law breaches. Two cases in 2020 resulted in repayments being made to the publicly-funded NHS:
The CMA's work in the pharmaceutical sector continues. Most recently, in February 2022, the CMA fined companies more than £35 million for agreeing to limit the supply of NHS prescription anti-nausea tablets (prochlorperazine). This included a fine on a private equity company that had owned one of the pharmaceutical companies concerned for part of the relevant period. Andrea Coscelli, Chief Executive of the CMA, has made it clear that: "All firms should know that we will not hesitate to take action like this against any businesses that collude at the expense of the NHS."
The CMA has not limited its action to competition enforcement cases, or to the pharmaceutical sector. It is currently investigating other sectors that are of particular relevance to public authorities, namely:
In the children's social care market and the radio network market, the local authorities and the Home Office, respectively, were found to be in weak bargaining positions and unable to secure value for money.
The Payment Systems Regulator (PSR) has also joined the CMA in defending public funds. In its first competition enforcement decision in January 2022, it fined five companies more than £33 million for cartel behaviour in the prepaid cards market. The companies were found to have colluded in providing prepaid card services to local authorities, which used the cards to make welfare payments to vulnerable people, including the homeless and asylum seekers. The PSR commented that this case was particularly serious because the illegal cartel behaviour meant there was less competition and choice for local authorities.
These examples highlight the role that competition law can play in helping to ensure that public authorities, and ultimately UK taxpayers, do not pay more than they should for essential products or services. The payment of monies to public bodies is a relatively recent development that to date has been limited to the pharmaceutical sector. It remains to be seen whether this practice will extend to other sectors where public authorities are the principal purchasers of goods or services – for example, in the transport, housing or healthcare sectors.