The Competition Commission of India (CCI) recently introduced the “overhauled” Combination Regulations in 2024 to regulate mergers, acquisitions, and amalgamations to ensure that such transactions do not result in the creation or strengthening of a dominant position, thereby harming competition in the market. This article is an attempt to review the regulation through the pre-implementation evaluation lens, which is a regulatory tool. As the Judicial Impact Assessment Report (arising from a task force committee chaired by Justice M. Jagannadha Rao) highlights, the introduction of new legislation has a direct impact on court workloads, making it necessary to anticipate the judicial system’s resource needs. The focus of the assessment here is to look into how the regulation might impact the judiciary and legislation in India.
An ideal piece of regulation should be baked through various stages, which usually starts from identifying “what is broken?” and ends at post implementation evaluation. One crucial stage during regulation formation is “pre-implementation evaluation” wherein the regulators or the law makers test the provisions of the regulations based on anticipated impact of the regulation on the market and stakeholders.
The important question here is, did the policy makers, before notifying the regulation, sufficiently analyze the potential impact of the regulations on various market components like, litigation, NCLAT, start-ups, big companies, investment cycle, foreign investment, and international transactions, to state a few? And most importantly are CCI, NCLAT and courts equipped to handle the impact the regulation is all set to bring?