Competition and Consumer Protection enhanced through EAC-COMESA Collaboration

By Andreas Stargard and Nicole Araujo

In addition to the massive changes occurring in the world of COMESA and its newly-styled COMESA Competition and Consumer Commission, on which we reported here and here, the East African Community Competition Authority (“EACCA”) and the (then) COMESA Competition Commission (“CCC”) had formalised their cooperation on regional competition and consumer protection through a Memorandum of Understanding (“MoU”) back in June 2025.

We wish to return briefly to this development, as it marked a significant effort by the two (potentially competing and decidedly geographically overlapping) regional bodies to address regulatory gaps that emerge where commercial activity extends across multiple regions, but regulatory authority remains confined by jurisdictional limits.

In essence, the MoU aims to strengthen collaboration between the two regional bodies on competition and consumer protection enforcement and creates a practical framework for coordinating cross-border cases and joint investigations into unfair market practices. This coordination will enable effective information sharing in the context of joint investigations, assist in carrying out market inquiries and studies, support technical assistance and capacity-building initiatives, while also helping to avoid duplication in enforcement efforts.

Recognising the need for streamlined coordination, the EACCA and CCC have committed to implementing annual action plans and to reviewing relevant regulations and guidelines to ensure their effectiveness and alignment across the two regional bodies.

The MoU between the EACCA and the CCC represents an important institutional step toward more coherent regional competition and consumer protection enforcement in Africa. While enhanced cooperation, information-sharing and coordinated investigations are necessary to address cross-border conduct, the practical impact of the MoU will depend on effective implementation and sufficient resourcing of both authorities. Ultimately, the success of this cooperation framework will be measured not by its formal commitments, but by whether it delivers predictable, efficient enforcement outcomes that strengthen market integration while safeguarding competition and consumer welfare across the region.

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