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ECONOMY
THIS WEEK> THIS WEEK NO. 49, 2013> ECONOMY
UPDATED: December 2, 2013 NO. 49 DECEMBER 5, 2013
Price Fixing
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China's leading price regulator will crack down on excessively high prices in six industries as it looks to further protect consumers, Shanghai Securities News reported on November 25.

The industries include aviation, consumer goods, automobiles, telecommunications, pharmaceuticals and home appliances, said Lu Yanchun, an official with the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), at a training course on anti-price monopoly laws and regulations in Guangzhou, capital of south China's Guangdong Province.

Lu said China has established an anti-monopoly legal system which contains an Anti-Monopoly Law, Regulations on Anti-Price Monopoly and Procedural Regulations on Administrative Enforcement of Anti-Price Monopoly.

In January, the NDRC imposed heavy fines on overseas companies after years of investigations. It levied 353 million yuan ($57.5 million) in fines against six liquid crystal display (LCD) producers, including Samsung, LG and four Taiwanese firms, for their participation in a price fixing cartel agreement.

In August, the NDRC imposed fines totaling 670 million yuan ($109.95 million) against six baby formula companies operating on the Chinese mainland following an anti-trust probe. The companies were Biostime, Mead Johnson, Dumex, Abbott, Friesland and Fonterra.



 
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