Australiaās competition watchdog has decided not to oppose US-based Turnitinās takeover of its European competitor Ouriginal.
The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) found that the proposed acquisition was āunlikely to substantially lessen competitionā in the supply of anti-plagiarism software to Antipodean colleges and universities.
ACCC commissioner Stephen Ridgeway said his organisation had initially been concerned that the buyout would relieve Turnitin of a āsignificant and innovative competitorā, but it concluded that Ouriginal had only a āminimal presence in Australia, with few customers and no Australian-based employeesā.
Consequently, the level of ācompetitive constraintā it imposed on Turnitin was no greater than that posed by the possibility that āother playersā, such as Google and Microsoft, might start servicing the Australian higher education market.
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The barriers preventing such players from entering the market were āunlikely to be prohibitiveā, the regulator found, āand the proposed acquisition is unlikely to significantly raise these barriersā.
Mr Ridgeway said Turnitinās current dominance of the market was ādue largely to its superior technology and large database of previously submitted student papers and academic journals that are used to check submitted works for plagiarismā.
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The ACCC also found that the proposed takeover was unlikely to impact research and development in text-matching tools. āOuriginal does not appear to be driving innovation in anti-plagiarism software,ā Mr Ridgeway said. āTurnitinās incentive to innovate is primarily driven by competition from other providers, and this will continue following the proposed acquisition.ā
The decision is likely to displease Australian universities and other higher education providers, with the Group of Eight among those opposing the takeover. Its September to the ACCC cited the āpotential for higher prices and lower service qualityā along with āconcerns about reduced product innovationā.
ACCC opposition would not have prevented the takeover from proceeding, but it could have affected Turnitinās activities in Australia following the buyout. The Competition and Consumer Act prohibits acquisitions likely to substantially reduce competition in any market, and the ACCC can take action against companies operating in Australia in breach of the act.
The UKās Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) greenlighted the proposed merger inĀ , citing Ouriginalās already limited presence in Britain. The CMA found that the UK anti-plagiarism software market was of āinsufficient importanceā to warrant a detailed investigation of the proposal.
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