Thursday, March 10, 2011

The Consumer Protection Act and you



GetSmarter*|10 March 2011 23:35 The Consumer Protection Act and you


How it will completely shake up the way business is done in South Africa.
The Consumer Protection Act (CPA) is undoubtedly a game-changing piece of legislation and promises to completely shake up the way business is done in South Africa. Signed into law in April 2009, but only being brought into effect as of 31 March 2011 (to give businesses time to comply with the changes), the Act will have an effect on almost every enterprise in the country. While this article is by no means comprehensive and should not be construed as legal advice, here are a few practical implications:

· The overarching ideal behind the Act is to protect consumers against unfair business practices. They will have recourse against companies that supply them with products or services. This means that the supplier will now have to carry the risk and expense of goods or services not being up to an acceptable standard (instead of it falling in the lap of the consumer, as has generally been the case up to now).

· The Act imposes default warranties and indemnities that favour the consumer – possibly over and above the warranties given by the supplier already.

· The Act applies to both products and services. So, whether you manufacture or sell something or provide a service, it applies to you.

· All agreements have to be in clear and understandable language. In the past, you could hide important details in the fine print of your agreements – this will no longer be the case.

· Any agreement that is deemed excessively one-sided in favour of anyone other than the consumer (generally, the supplier) can be ruled to be unreasonable and unjust. This allows the consumer to get out of the agreement.

· In the past, a consumer had to show a causal link as well as negligence on behalf of the supplier to have a claim against a supplier for a defective product or service. Now, no negligence needs to be proved; all that has to be shown is that the product or service is defective or sub-standard. (There may be some exclusions from liability for distributors or retailers, but not producers or importers.)

· Your marketing methods are going to be affected. The Act brings in new restrictions and conditions for direct marketing, negative option (or inertia) marketing, catalogue marketing, coupons, loyalty programs, promotions and more. Specifically with direct marketing, a “cooling-off period” of 5 days will now apply to all transactions.

· All business names will have to be registered. In the past, you could trade under as many “trading as” names as you wanted, and they didn’t have to be related to your registered name. Now, if you want to use a name for trading (in any way or form), you will have to register it. The reasoning behind this is so that consumers know exactly who they’re dealing with.

· A lot of this means that prices may increase. Businesses will have to go to the expense of redrafting agreements, reworking marketing campaigns, and taking on (more) liability insurance. These things all cost money, and this will very likely be passed onto the consumer in one way or another.

The flip side of the coin

While this may all seem extremely onerous to a business owner or manager – adding to your already heavy admin load – there are some positives too. For one, you could work your compliance with the new Act into your marketing: explain to your customers exactly how well they’re protected when shopping with you, and you could get a step up on some of your slower-uptake competitors.

Also remember that this means more protection for you when you’re wearing your “consumer hat”. You’ll have more recourse when you feel like you’re getting exploited by some great big corporation. The Act also defines juristic persons (which includes companies, trusts, partnerships and so on) as consumers and affords them the same protection – but only if the juristic person’s turnover is less than R3 million a year. So, for now, it’s only really individuals and small businesses that are going benefit from this one.

Gareth Cotten is an entrepreneur, a small-business owner and the Course Convener of the University of Cape Town Start and Manage a Small Business course, which starts on 4 April 2011. www.getsmarter.co.za.

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