On 22 November 2022, China's State Administration for Market Regulation ("SAMR") released the Draft Amendments to the Anti-Unfair Competition Law ("Draft AUCL Amendments"). Enacted in 1993 (and subsequently amended in 2017 and 2019), China's Anti-Unfair Competition Law ("AUCL") regulates business operators' unfair competition activities that disrupt market competition and harm the lawful rights and interests of other business operators or consumers. 1
The Draft AUCL Amendments introduce measures targeting a broad swathe of unfair competition activities that have caught the authorities' attention. These measures include improving fair competition in the digital economy, prohibiting malicious trading, expanding liability to persons who aid acts of confusion, refining the prohibition against false advertising, promoting the establishment of an integrated trade secret protection system, prohibiting companies with a "relatively advantageous position" from abusing their market position, updating the scope of commercial bribery, and adjusting (and in some cases, increasing) violators' legal liabilities.
Article 8 of the Draft AUCL Amendments proposes the following changes to the AUCL’s prohibition against commercial bribery:
If adopted, these proposed changes may spur companies to update certain business practices by:
With the digital economy in full swing, new business models have given rise to new forms of unfair competition that leverage data, algorithms, technologies, and platform rules. Against this backdrop, the Draft AUCL Amendments propose regulating a raft of unfair competition activities, including the following:
Malicious trading not caught by the above categories is also prohibited.
The AUCL provides that the SAMR shall order the cessation of malicious trading. Article 35 of the Draft AUCL Amendments increases the maximum fines for malicious trading from RMB 3 million (~US$ 442,000) to RMB 5 million (US$ 737,000), and provides that illegal gains made from the malicious trading shall be confiscated.
Article 36 of the Draft AUCL Amendments increases the maximum penalty for violating Articles 16 – 20 of the Draft AUCL Amendments from RMB 3 million (~US$ 442,000) to RMB 5 million (~US$ 737,000) and adds that the SAMR shall order cessation of the illegal activity and confiscate the illegal gains. 4 Article 38 of the Draft AUCL Amendments imposes enhanced penalties for particularly serious violations 5 of its Articles 13 and 16 – 20 in the form of higher fines of up to 5% of the business operator's annual turnover from the previous year, suspension of the business, and revocation of a business operator's business permits or business license. In addition, if found personally liable in such cases, the legal representative, primary person in charge and directly liable persons of the business operators, shall be subject to a fine between RMB 100,000 (~US$ 14,700) and RMB 1 million (~US$ 147,000).
Article 21 of the Draft AUCL Amendments provides a non-exhaustive list of factors that may be considered to assess whether acts of unfair competition specified in its Articles 13 – 20 6 have been committed, including the following:
These proposed updates suggest that Chinese regulators are serious about clamping down on new unfair competition behaviors that proliferated in the digital economy.
The AUCL prohibits business operators from engaging in specified acts of confusion causing the consumer to be misled about the origin of a commodity. Article 7 of the Draft AUCL Amendments expands the original obligation imposed on business operators to persons who aid acts of confusion. Persons who aid acts of confusion include those who sell confusing commodities or provide facilitative conditions such as the storage, transport, mail, printing, concealment, or business premises for the commission of confusing acts.
Under the current AUCL, business operators who engage in specific acts of confusion are subject to administrative penalties, including cessation of the illegal act, confiscation of illegal income, fines of up to RMB 250,000 (~US $37,000), and if the circumstances are serious, revocation of business licenses. Article 28 of the Draft AUCL Amendments applies these administrative penalties to those who aid business operators commit acts of confusion.
However, if the confusing commodities are sold without knowledge of the aider and the aider can prove that they obtained the commodities legally and identify the providers of the commodities, then SAMR will only order the sale to be ceased and the other administrative penalties will not be assessed. The extension of liability to those who aid acts of confusion will arguably increase the burden on resellers and distributors to ensure that they are not facilitating the sale of commodities that mislead consumers. Network platform operators will also likely need to strengthen their compliance programs to ensure that they are not aiding unscrupulous actors to commit acts of confusion.
1 Article 2 of the AUCL.
2 See also Article 163 of the Criminal Law of the People's Republic of China.
3 Article 2 of the AUCL defines "commodities" as including services.
4 Article 20 of the Draft AUCL Amendments is a new provision prohibiting business operators from committing "other online acts of unfair competition."
5 The Draft AUCL Amendments use "under particularly serious circumstances," "of a particularly execrable nature," and "seriously damaging the order of fair competition or the public interest" to describe such serious violations but does not provide additional guidance.
6 Article 13 of the AUCL Draft Amendments prohibits companies with a "relatively advantageous position" from abusing their market position. Articles 14 – 20 prohibit unfair competition in relation to the digital economy.
Xue Feng (White & Case, Associate, Beijing) contributed to the development of this publication
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