Outsourcing deals face EC competition scrutiny

More Brussels red-tape could lead to contract delays...

By Andy McCue, 29 August 2007 16:14

NEWS

New competition guidelines are set to put outsourcing deals under greater scrutiny from European Commission regulators.

The EC's latest updated guidelines, and interpretation of the 1990 Merger Regulation, now include a section on how an increasing number of joint-venture outsourcing deals can fall under the terms of the legislation.

This means where an outsourcing supplier is buying all or part of the IT assets being outsourced by a company - such as a joint venture arrangement - the deal may need to go to the EC for approval.

The threshold test for deals that will need EC approval is if the supplier has a turnover of €5bn globally and €250m in Europe, and if the potential turnover of the outsourced IT operation also exceeds €250m per year.

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Deals that have already come under EC scrutiny include IBM's Italia deal in 2001 and Lufthansa's IT joint-venture with EDS in 1995. Most deals will be approved within five weeks but a small number that need greater scrutiny could take up to four months to get the go-ahead from the EC.

Phil McDonnell, head of competition at law firm Addleshaw Goddard, said companies will have to factor this extra time and the possible delay into their outsourcing plans from the start.

He told silicon.com: "You have got to build in some time into your procurement to give the supplier time to go through the hoops. You could also use it to identify suppliers who will give you least aggravation - it might give the smaller suppliers potential differentiation."

Suppliers will also need to factor these likely delays into their planning but McDonnell also warned the EC may eventually start to restrict the number of outsourcing deals any one supplier can hold with companies in a particular sector because of competition regulations.

He said: "There will come a point where a regulator will say a supplier has got too many deals in the same sector. I don't think we are at that point yet but that is where it is heading."

Comments

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  1. 1. Dr. Duncan Druhl

    "European Free market"? Get real!

    The only bright spot in this is that my children are training to be solicitors so that they will be able to make enough money to support me in my dotage helping companies get around the bureaucratic controls that such a monopolistic quasi-government can establish.

    The negative for the consumer is that this will just make things cost more.

    Governments win - companies with the money to get around it win - consumers lose. Nothing new there. The fuedalisation of Europe continues apace.

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