Competition Act
Marginal note:Definition of anti-competitive act
78 (1) For the purposes of section 79, anti-competitive act, without restricting the generality of the term, includes any of the following acts:
(a) squeezing, by a vertically integrated supplier, of the margin available to an unintegrated customer who competes with the supplier, for the purpose of impeding or preventing the customer’s entry into, or expansion in, a market;
(b) acquisition by a supplier of a customer who would otherwise be available to a competitor of the supplier, or acquisition by a customer of a supplier who would otherwise be available to a competitor of the customer, for the purpose of impeding or preventing the competitor’s entry into, or eliminating the competitor from, a market;
(c) freight equalization on the plant of a competitor for the purpose of impeding or preventing the competitor’s entry into, or eliminating the competitor from, a market;
(d) use of fighting brands introduced selectively on a temporary basis to discipline or eliminate a competitor;
(e) pre-emption of scarce facilities or resources required by a competitor for the operation of a business, with the object of withholding the facilities or resources from a market;
(f) buying up of products to prevent the erosion of existing price levels;
(g) adoption of product specifications that are incompatible with products produced by any other person and are designed to prevent his entry into, or to eliminate him from, a market;
(h) requiring or inducing a supplier to sell only or primarily to certain customers, or to refrain from selling to a competitor, with the object of preventing a competitor’s entry into, or expansion in, a market; and
(i) selling articles at a price lower than the acquisition cost for the purpose of disciplining or eliminating a competitor.
(j) and (k) [Repealed, 2009, c. 2, s. 427]
(2) [Repealed, 2009, c. 2, s. 427]
- R.S., 1985, c. 19 (2nd Supp.), s. 45
- 2000, c. 15, s. 13
- 2009, c. 2, s. 427
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