Commerce and Consumer Affairs Minister Kris Faafoi today tabled legislation reviving plans that would criminalise cartels, attaching harsher penalties including the threat of jail.
The Commerce (Criminalisation of Cartels) Amendment Bill will make it a criminal offence to engage in a cartel, adding the threat of imprisonment which Faafoi said he hoped would be a "strong deterrent" with existing civil penalties too weak to deter the anticompetitive behaviour.
The law would run the criminal regime in tandem with the civil one, threatening up to seven years' jail and/or a fine of up to $500,000 for an individual.
"This government wants to take a strong stance against business people who collude against the interests of consumers," Faafoi said. "Many of our trading partners, including Australia, have a criminal offence for cartel conduct."
The move revives plans to criminalise cartels that were dropped by former Commerce Minister Paul Goldsmith who preferred leaving New Zealand out of step with the US, UK, Canada and Australia, for fear it would have a chilling effect on business.