Malaysia proposes RM86 million fine on Grab for abusive practices

Publish date: Thu, 03 Oct 2019, 01:16 PM
KUALA LUMPUR: The Malaysia Competition Commission (MyCC) proposed a fine of over RM86 million on ride-hailing firm Grab for violating the country's competition law by imposing restrictive clauses on its drivers.
 
The competition regulator ruled that Singapore-based Grab, which has major backing from Japan's SoftBank Group Corp, had abused its dominant position in the local market by preventing its drivers from promoting and providing advertising services for its competitors.
 
"MyCC further notes that the restrictive clauses had the effect of distorting competition in the relevant market that is premised on multi-sided platforms by creating barriers to entry and expansion for Grab's existing and future competitors," MyCC Chairman Iskandar Ismail told a news conference.
 
MyCC also imposed a daily penalty of RM15,000 beginning Thursday for as long as Grab fails "to take remedial actions as directed by the commission in addressing the competition concerns".
 
Grab did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
 
Iskandar said Grab has 30 working days to make their representations to the commission before a final decision will be made.
 
The regulator said last year it would monitor Grab for possible anti-competitive behaviour after its acquisition of rival Uber Technologies Inc's Southeast Asian business in March 2018.
 
Malaysia would be the third country in the region to penalise Grab after the deal with Uber.
 
Last year, both firms were fined by anti-trust watchdogs in Singapore and the Philippines for their merger.
 
Singapore said the deal had driven up prices, while the Philippines criticised the firms for completing the merger too soon and for a dip in quality of service.
 
However, Iskandar said the Malaysian regulator's investigations were based on complaints received against the ride-hailing firm, and not due to its near monopoly of the market after the Uber deal.
 
Under Malaysia's Competition Act, a monopoly or dominant player in the market is not an infringement of the law, unless it abuses its position in the market.
 
"MyCC does not have mergers powers. We cannot unscramble the egg," Iskandar said.
 
 
 - Reuters
Discussions
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PunTatBerSiul

These clauses are not new. They have manifested into unwritten law. These Singapore companies treat Malaysian workforce like sanitary pad..Pakai buang. The clauses are designed to enrich themselves. Plant a mole in these companies and get a copy of their appointment letter and you will discover illegal deduction, penalties and restrictive clauses. This is rampant especially in MSC companies and call centers.

2019-10-03 20:47

speakup

this is actually malaysia's revenge against Grab for migrating their biz from malaysia to singapore.
Airasia fine by MyCC mana got so high one? Only a couple of millions.
But this Grab fine is REVENGE!

2019-10-05 23:07

Vc Looi

Drivers can do service promoting? Should grab drivers promote service from other car hailing its like should public bank workers promote Maybank services?

2019-10-07 09:35

DreamKentut

That is not the real reason. Real reason is taxi companies bosses are behind this move. Their "loan shark" method of operating taxis are not profitable anymore.

2019-10-09 10:30

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