New draft laws would broaden the scope of existing UCT laws, introduce penalties and increase penalties for all competition and consumer law contraventions. On 28 September 2022, the Federal Government tabled the Treasury Laws Amendment (More Competition, Better Prices) Bill 2022 (Cth) (UCT Reform Bill). This bill is aimed at amending unfair contract terms laws.
The UCT Reform Bill is, in substance, the same as the previous unfair contract terms bill you may have seen, which lapsed when parliament was dissolved for the May election. We previously reported on that bill here. However, the current bill also proposes significant increases to the maximum penalties under the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth) (CCA), including the Australian Consumer Law (ACL).
This Insight provides an overview of proposed changes in the reforming legislation, including the amendments to the UCT regime and the increased penalties under the CCA and ACL. Given the imminent passage of these reforms, now is the time to prepare your organisation for the changes and review and amend any potentially problematic standard form contracts.
The UCT Reform Bill would introduce the following changes to the unfair contract terms laws in both the ACL and the Australian Securities and Investments Commission Act 2001 (Cth) (ASIC Act):
The laws would apply to standard form contracts entered into or renewed 12 months after the laws take effect, or to terms within contracts that are varied following that date.
The UCT Reform Bill also proposes the following increases to the maximum penalties under the CCA and the ACL.
A corporation
Where the value of the benefit cannot be determined, 10% of annual turnover in the 12 months preceding the act or omission.
Where the value of the benefit cannot be determined, 30% of the adjusted turnover during the breach turnover period for the act or omission.
An individual
The introduction of a 'breach turnover period' will mean the relevant period for the penalty calculation will cover the period from when a business is found to have begun committing a contravention to when it ceased doing so. The minimum period will be 12 months. In many cases the 'breach turnover period' may be longer than the period used to determine maximum turnover in the current law (which is 12 months immediately prior to the breach).
These changes substantially increase the penalties applicable to contraventions of the CCA, including cartel conduct, anticompetitive agreements, misuse of market power and consumer law contraventions including unfair contract terms. This comes after changes were introduced in 2018 to increase penalties for contraventions of the ACL (discussed here), and against the backdrop of a general trend for higher penalties (discussed here).
No changes are proposed to the penalty amounts under the ASIC Act.
The UCT Reform Bill is intended to commence 12 months after the bill receives Royal Assent. This 12-month period is intended to provide businesses time to review and amend relevant contracts in preparedness for the new provisions. The new unfair contract terms laws will apply to standard form contracts entered into following commencement of the reforms, as well as to any existing standard form contracts that are renewed after commencement.
The increased penalties are proposed to take effect from the date the UCT Reform Bill receives Royal Assent.
We recommend using this time to prepare for the changes and making sure your business has its standard form contracts in order. The broader scope of the amended UCT regime, as well as the substantial increase to financial penalties under the CCA, heightens the consequences of contractual terms being found 'unfair'.
You can also read our coverage of what else to expect from the Government on competition and consumer laws in our two-part series: accessible here and here.
The UCT reforms are proposed to come into effect 12 months from Royal Assent.
Now is the time to ensure your business' standard form contracts are compliant.