Australian Made
At Australian Choice we only sell products that are made in Australia
- but what does that mean?
We use the criteria set by the Australian Made Campaign, which is a government funded body set up to administer the Australian made logo (green triangle with a kangaroo in gold).
The Australian Competition & Consumer Commission (ACCC) also plays an important part in protecting country of origin claims.
Country of origin claims
A country of origin claim is any labeling, packaging, logo or advertising that makes a statement, claim or implication about the country from which goods come.
The most common claims are 'Made in Australia', or 'Product of Australia'.
The law
The Trade Practices Act prohibits businesses from making false or misleading representation concerning the place of origin of goods.
The Act defines a set of defences for goods that pass certain tests. These are set out below.
'Made in Australia'
This claim has two components that must be met:
- the goods must have been substantially transformed in the country claimed to be the origin; and
- 50 per cent or more of the costs of production must have been carried out in that country.
Substantial transformation
The provisions define substantial transformations as:
A fundamental change . in form, appearance or nature such that the goods existing after the change are new and different goods from those existing before the change.
What does that mean?
It means that simple treatments or processing - such as repackaging or mere assembly - are not likely to qualify an otherwise imported good for the 'Made in Australia' claim.
Costs of production
Under the Act, three broad categories of costs of production or manufacture are considered:
expenditure on materials, labour and overheads. The costs must relate directly to the final goods.
'Product of Australia'
This is now regarded as a premium claim about the origin of goods, and two rigorous criteria must be met:
- each significant component (or ingredient) of the good must originate from the country of the claim; and
- all, or virtually all, of the production processes must take place there.
Complaints and inquiries
Complaints and enquiries should be taken up with the retailer who sold the goods or with the manufacturer. They might not realise that their claims risk breaching the law.
Otherwise you can contact the ACCC at its offices in each capital city as well as Townsville and Tamworth.
More information
The ACCC's guide to Country of origin claims and the Trade Practices Act is available free from all ACCC offices or on its website