IFA Calls on FTC to Abandon Overreach
Says FTC continues to exceed its authority and disregard the rulemaking process; Urges FTC to enforce and update the Franchise Rule and complete overdue improvements to pre-sale disclosure
WASHINGTON – In formal comments to the Federal Trade Commission’s (FTC) re-opened Request for Information (RFI) on franchisor practices and franchise agreements, the International Franchise Association (IFA) urged the FTC to respect the boundaries of the authority and adhere to its rulemaking requirements, all of which were disregarded by the FTC’s recent Policy Statement and Staff Guidance. The comments further highlight the damage potential regulation could have for viability of the entire franchise business model.
IFA President and CEO Matt Haller said:
“In spite of all available legal, empirical, and anecdotal evidence to the contrary, the FTC seems to be operating under the false premise that franchisor control is inherently bad for franchisees. Federal courts have repeatedly ruled, and empirical studies have repeatedly demonstrated, that franchisees (and consumers) benefit from the uniformity and predictability that result from a franchisor’s imposition of standards on its system. Imposing unilateral, substantial, and burdensome regulations on the franchise community will result in significant harm on existing and future franchisees and reduce the viability of the franchise model. The FTC should focus its limited resources on improving the Franchise Rule’s outdated disclosure regime, as recommended by the IFA, state regulators, bipartisan members of Congress, and the GAO.”
The comments detail the ways the FTC continues to exceed its authority, including its attempts to “regulate private contracts and impair franchisors’ trademark and other intellectual property rights without complying with the extensive rulemaking procedures mandated by the FTC Act.” The full comments are available here.
Thousands of members of the franchising community joined IFA in responding to the RFI since it was issued in March 2023, highlighting the ways the franchise business model should be protected and cautioning the Commission against imposing unworkable, overly broad regulation that could put franchised businesses at a disadvantage to their non-franchised counterparts, eliminating competition and diminishing the equity franchisees have built in their businesses.
Rather than overregulating franchise relationships, IFA highlights the ways the franchise community and its key stakeholders have worked together to improve disclosure and strengthen franchise relationships since the RFI was issued, including:
- IFA spearheading legislation to amend the California Franchise Investment Law (S.B. 919) by adding registration and disclosure requirements for franchise brokers, addressing concerns raised to the Commission as early as the November 2020. The bipartisan bill was signed into law by Governor Gavin Newsom last month.
- IFA and its members developing IFA’s Responsible Franchising principles released in May 2024 as a roadmap for improved disclosure for franchisors, franchisees, and suppliers.
- IFA supporting the Model Broker Registration Act proposed by the North American Securities Administrators Association (NASAA) in May 2024 that protect the franchise model through improved franchise disclosures.
IFA’s second comment supplements the concerns expressed in its initial response to the RFI submitted in June 2023 and reiterates the call for the FTC to focus its efforts on enforcement and improvement of presale disclosures under the Franchise Rule, as described in IFA’s aforementioned Responsible Franchising principles.
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About the International Franchise Association:
Celebrating over 60 years of excellence, education, and advocacy, the International Franchise Association (IFA) is the world’s oldest and largest organization representing franchising worldwide. IFA works through its government relations and public policy, media relations, and educational programs to protect, enhance and promote franchising and the approximately 806,270 franchise establishments that support nearly 8.7 million direct jobs, $858.5 billion of economic output for the U.S. economy, and almost 3 percent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP). IFA members include franchise companies in over 300 different business format categories, individual franchisees, and companies that support the industry in marketing, law, technology, and business development.