Malaysia

Chicken cartel: MyCC denies certain politicians under investigation

Ongoing probe focused on poultry industry players, says CEO Iskandar Ismail

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 29 Apr 2022 6:21PM

Chicken cartel: MyCC denies certain politicians under investigation
MyCC hopes that the public and the media would understand the complexity of the investigation which involved several players in the poultry supply chain, says CEO Iskandar Ismail. – AFP pic, April 29, 2022

KUALA LUMPUR – The Malaysian Competition Commission (MyCC) has denied that it is investigating certain politicians in connection with cartel operations in the poultry industry.

Its chief executive officer Iskandar Ismail said the ongoing investigations are only focused on a group of poultry industry players whose actions may raise certain concerns under Section 4 of the Competition Act 2010.

“The claim that the MyCC is investigating certain politicians is mere speculation,” he said in a statement today.

He said there was also confusion among the public on the “cartel” definition under the Competition Act.

“A cartel is formed through a confidential agreement between competitors in the same market. Before any cartel is created, there must be at least two competitors who agree not to compete with each other in the related market. Usually, this competitor group had agreed, among other things, to fix the products at the same price, or to divide their market, or to limit production,” he said. 

Iskandar said a cartel is not a monopoly and vice versa, as a monopoly is an enterprise that has full control of a product or service.

“If there is more than one player in the market, one or more than one enterprise can be in a dominant position if they hold about 60% of the market. Therefore, trying to equate a cartel and a monopoly as similar is completely wrong,” he said.

As such, he said, MyCC hoped that the public and the media would understand the complexity of the investigation which involved several players in the supply chain.

“A thorough investigation is needed and this may take time. We encourage those who feel they are involved in cartel practices in the poultry industry to come forward to apply for leniency under Section 41 of the Competition Act 2010 before they are investigated,” he said, while urging all parties to refrain from speculating on the issue to avoid disrupting the MyCC investigation and to prevent confusion among the public.

Enterprises, related stakeholders and the public are encouraged to assist investigations by contacting MyCC at 03-2273-2277 (IED) or by sending an email to [email protected].

Earlier, local media had reported that cartels continued to dominate the poultry industry due to political interference.

The report also revealed that cartels also controlled the daily market of 1.5 million chickens, which is 70% of the total 2.2 million chickens sold nationwide every day. – Bernama, April 29, 2022

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