TravelNews

[Travel News]: Booking.com, Trip.com to drop lowest-rate terms on Korea’s regulatory demand

TheTourAttraction.com aims to provide the latest global travel and free travel news, travel and visa policies, and flight information. We hope to provide insights into tourism market, technology and development trends with everyone by providing the latest relevant information. Despite the raging COVID-19 epidemic in 2020, we always firmly believe that mankind will overcome the disease and the tourism market will definitely recover. TheTourAttraction.com look forward to your attention and support, and witness the development of the global tourism industry with us. Looking forward to the information TheTourAttraction.com provide can help you. We will continue to follow up and obtain the latest data, and look forward to your attention and support.

The following is the [Travel News]: Booking.com, Trip.com to drop lowest-rate terms on Korea’s regulatory demand from [BusinessKorea] recommended by TheTourAttraction.com:

In the corrective measures presented to the FTC, they offered to delete the “lowest guarantee” clauses in their contracts with lodging companies.

Global online travel agencies (OTAs), including Booking.Com, Agoda, Expedia and Trip.Com, have submitted to the Korea Fair Trade Commission (FTC) corrective measures for the abuse of their superior position in the market against Korean lodging companies.

These companies were investigated by the FTC for demanding lowest price guarantees from Korean lodging companies. In the corrective measures presented to the FTC, they offered to delete the “lowest guarantee” clauses in their contracts with lodging companies.

When a hotel signs a lowest price guarantee contract with an OTA, it is required not to post prices lower than the ones offered to the OTA on its website or not to offer lower prices to other OTAs.

The level of the FTC’s sanctions against the OTAs is expected to be somewhat lowered as they have submitted corrective measures before the FTC requests the prosecution to indict them.

Behind the FTC’s investigation of the OTAs lies FTC Chairman Cho Sung-wook’s interest in monitoring “untact” and non-face-to-face industries. Cho launched a task force dedicated to the ICT sector in November 2019. It consists of three divisions — online platforms, mobile, and intellectual property rights. Cho is determined to level the playing field in digital industries.

The FTC has launched such an extensive oversight of online platforms because it believes that the current fair trade law alone has limitations in regulating various unfair practices as related markets are growing rapidly. Global OTAs have emerged as the tourism and lodging industries were reorganized based on web and mobile platforms. They quickly dominated the market based on their strong capital power and data. The FTC plans to determine the level of punishments based on the OTA companies’ corrective measures.

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button