South Africa Considers Curbs on Retail Exclusivity Contracts

South Africa Considers Curbs on Retail Exclusivity Contracts
Photo: Moneyweb 27.05.2026 507

The Democratic Alliance (DA), which is a part of the Government of National Unity, is considering amending the Competition Act to address anti-competitive exclusivity agreements between retailers and their suppliers.

This month a draft amendment to Rule 39 of the Competition Act was proposed, allowing the Competition Commission to compel firms to comply with merger conditions through Tribunal applications.

Large retailers or anchor tenants have previously come under fire for exclusivity agreements between them and shopping mall owners.

For instance, a Competition Commission inquiry in 2019 found evidence that these agreements excluded small and large retailers from competing in shopping centres, and the justifications for the leases were often questionable. These agreements were considered restrictive vertical practices in competition law, although the Competition Act has not yet been changed on this matter.

The DA’s proposal followed reports of a dispute between Woolworths and Grey’s Marine, a supplier of fish, that forced the small business to close down after supplying Woolworths for over 30 years. Some 230 jobs were lost, and the company went out of business.

The issue also came to the fore two weeks ago after the liquidation of Beyers Chocolates. Beyers, a supplier to Woolworths for 34 years, was forced to close after Woolworths withdrew its business, claiming Beyers had infringed its exclusivity agreement by supplying products to other retailers.

Beyers had contended that exclusivity agreements should be confined to product categories and should not apply to companies with production facilities that also supply non-competitive products to other customers.

Woolworths Holdings in turn rejected claims it was responsible for the liquidation of Beyers, saying the decision to end the long-running partnership was made to protect its brand and proprietary products.

A statement from the DA said Friday that there is no good economic reason why any retailer should tell a supplier they can’t sell goods elsewhere, and there is no reason any supplier should force a retailer to carry only their brand of a certain class of product.

Under South African competition law, if a firm controls 45% or more of a defined market, they are automatically deemed to possess significant market power. The 45% threshold represents an irrefutable presumption of dominance.

However, where a dominant firm imposes unfair or discriminatory contract terms on smaller contracting parties, this may constitute an abuse of dominance under Section 8. This is particularly relevant in supply chain relationships where smaller businesses contract with large corporates, the DA said.

Source: IOL

food markets  South Africa 

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