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Competition Policy: brief history

Competition Policy: brief history. Lesson 1. Anti-trust law in the US. Origins of the Sherman Act: formation of trusts Formation of a large single market due to transportation & communication economies of scale and scope + innovationsexpansion in the size of firms

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Competition Policy: brief history

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  1. Competition Policy: brief history Lesson 1

  2. Anti-trust law in the US • Origins of the Sherman Act: formation of trusts • Formation of a large single market due to transportation & communicationeconomies of scale and scope + innovationsexpansion in the size of firms • Separation between ownership-control • Liberalization of incorporation lawswaves of mergers • Fall in trasportation and communication resulted also in a rise competitionlow and unstable prices (low costs for scale/scope ec.)

  3. Large investmentsattempt to operate at full capacity to cover fixed costs resulted also in price decrease • Firms answered to price war with PRICE AGREEMENTS to keep margins • Consumers and small firms were hurt by high prices political force of farmers and small bussiness lead to ANTI-TRUST laws in many US states • Little effects at a federal level in 1890 enough consensus for the SHERMAN ACT

  4. Sherman Act • Section 1 prohibits contracts which restrain trade prison and fines for violators • Section 2 prohibits monopolisation (prison up to 3 years) • In the first decade enforcement was not strict • 1897: Supreme Court decision on a cartel of 18 railways fixing the transport faresillegal • Prohibition of price agreements: strong principle, still valid, few exceptions • Prohibitions in vertical relationships:resale-price maintenance • Standard oiltrust by Rockfellermonopolisation practices (predatory prices and acquisition of minor firms) + Terminal railroad (essential facility case)

  5. Sherman Act II • Sherman act cover price fixing, market sharing agreements and monopolization, not mergers • Firms wishing to coordinate price had the option of merging into a single firmsharp increse in the number of mergers • The Clayton Act of 1914 extended antitrust to cover mergers reducing competition • The Clayton act also forbids other practices like price discrimination • Creation of the Federal trade Commission – independent agency - that shares with the Department of Justice enforcement of antitrust laws

  6. History…Politics… • During the great depression less enforcement of antitrust laws: more price control, more regulation • Ex. Coal Mine industry reduction of demand, to avoid losses 137 producers formed a company to control prices and allocate output reasonable protection of the market against destruction • Competition laws and enforcement should be understood in the political-economic-historic context

  7. More activism • Until the mid-70s: more activism • International salt (1947) esatblished a rule prohibiting TIE-In SALES (a producer sells a product only if the consumer buy another one) • Courts ruled against “exclusive territorial clauses” (only one distributor can operate in each area) • Alcoa case (alluminium): the mere fact that Alcoa had 90% market shares and was building new capacity was enough to prove “monopolisation”

  8. Chicago and Reagan • Chicago school criticized antitrust activism and stessed the efficiency rationale behind vertical restraints and mergers • Joint effect of the Chicago views and the loss of competitveness of US firm abroad changed the enforcement attitude of antitrust • This trend became a major change during the Reagan Administrationmarket forces should be let free to select more efficient firms • In 1977 there was a peak of 1611 antitrust cases, in 1989 only 638

  9. Competition laws in the EU-Germany • National and supra-national jurisdiction • Most European Countries had competition laws very recently (reproducing the features of the treaty of Rome) • Germany: initially cartel were seen as an instrument to control instability created by cut-throat competition and price-wars Cartel were even enforced in Courts • In 1923 an anti-cartel law was introduced as a reaction to hyperinflation • Firms cooperation and mergers was seen as a way to make them stronger and create “national champions” • After world War II the Allied imposed antitrust laws in Germany & Japan to break concentration of economic powerGermany passed a competition law in 1957

  10. Competition laws in the EU- The UK • After world War II competition was seen as a remedy to unemploymentCompetition law of 1998 brought the Uk in line with the EU • Until the 1998 the UK lacked a system of penalties and tools of enforcement (Uk authorities were not entitled to search firms’headquarters and seize documents)

  11. Competition law in the European Communities • Supra-national competition law in the EU orginates from the “Treaty of Paris” European Coal & Steel Community • Prohibition of trade barriers, discriminatory practices and other restrictions able to distort competition • Aims: 1.equal access to basic resources 2. free competition increasingly seen as the best way to assure efficient markets (due to the success of the US economy relying on antitrust law) • Competition rules under the Treaty of Paris wanted to avoid discrimination on national grounds

  12. Competition Policy in the EU • Today the main objectives of Competition policy enforced by the EC (under the Treaty of Rome) are probably economic efficiency and European market Integration • Social reasons are also consideredexemption to “Crisis cartels”agreeements where firms engage in reciprocal permanent reductions of overcapacity minimize the social cost of unemployment: the social cost may be too high since many firms might exit the industry producing job losses • Importance give to SME”de minimis rule” little harm can be done by firms of limited size compared to the size of the marketorigins from the crisis of the heavy industry in the 70’rely on SME for industrial growth

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