A parent shops for school uniforms at an outlet in Nairobi. PHOTO | PAUL WAWERU
By ALLAN ODHIAMBO, aodhiambo@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- CAK has asked any parents, guardians and students who had been directed to buy school uniforms from specific outlets to lodge evidence-based complaint with it for legal action.
- The warning by CAK came as hundreds of thousands of pupils who sat the 2015 Kenya Certificate of Primary Education examination prepared to join Form 1 starting next week.
- Most school administrators currently demand that school uniforms be bought at specific outlets, limiting choices for buyers — an action CAK said contravenes the law.
The competition watchdog has launched a crackdown on
school administrators suspected to be colluding with traders to drive up
sales of uniforms.
The Competition Authority of Kenya (CAK) on Wednesday asked
any parents, guardians and students who had been directed to buy school
uniforms from specific outlets to lodge evidence-based complaint with it
for legal action.
“It has come to the notice of the CAK that some
schools, both public and private, are recommending outlets from which
their school uniforms can be purchased in the admission letters and
school joining instructions, without any explicit benefits to parents or
consumers” CAK director-general Kariuki Wang’ombe said.
“The CAK here notifies the affected school
administrators, school uniform shops and outlets, parents and the
general public that this practice contravenes section 21(3)(b) of the
(Competition) Act and further undermines the spirit and benefits of
competition,” he said.
Article 21(3)(b) of the Competition Act prohibits
parties against actions that divide markets by allocating customers,
suppliers, areas or specific types of goods or services.
The warning by CAK came as hundreds of thousands of
pupils who sat the 2015 Kenya Certificate of Primary Education
examination prepared to join Form 1 starting next week.
Most school administrators currently demand that
school uniforms be bought at specific outlets, limiting choices for
buyers — an action CAK said contravenes the law.
A spot check in several uniform outlets in Nairobi
on Wednesday confirmed that most schools had issued admission letters
with instructions on where to buy them. Some of the admission letters
even had maps of the physical locations of the uniform outlets.
A sample of letters shown to the Business Daily
were specific on which shops to get the uniforms and other requirements
from. Some of the known uniform shops in Nairobi are Animet Limited,
School Outfitters and Uniform Distributors Limited.
Inquiries further revealed that even parents of
kindergarten-going children in Nairobi are instructed on where to buy
the uniforms.
“My son’s school admission letter directed that I
buy the uniform from here and I have no choice but to do so. I can’t
risk buying uniform elsewhere and later have it rejected at school
because of the shade does not match what is required,” Japheth Ngugi,
told the Business Daily outside the School Outfitters shop on Mundi Mbigu Street, Nairobi.
The regulator urged parents to purchase uniforms from outlets of their choice.
“School principals and administrators are hereby
cautioned from engaging in this conduct as parents should be free to buy
uniform from their preferred shops or outlets as long as school uniform
bought meets the colour, shade, thread count and design as prescribed
by the respective schools. Any parent or member of the public who is
aggrieved by this conduct henceforth should contact CAK,” said Mr
Wang’ombe.
Besides helping to drive sales volumes, insiders
said, this strategy has been abused by some traders to charge exorbitant
prices amid concern that some school administrators may be benefiting
from the proceeds of the exaggerated prices.
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