1 / 33

EC365 Theory of Monopoly and Regulation Topic 3: Collusion

EC365 Theory of Monopoly and Regulation Topic 3: Collusion. 2013-14, Spring Term Dr Helen Weeds. Monopoly power. Monopoly outcomes monopoly pricing price discrimination costs, technology. Routes to monopoly power. Monopoly power. Collude. Exclude. Merge. Lecture outline.

monet
Download Presentation

EC365 Theory of Monopoly and Regulation Topic 3: Collusion

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. EC365 Theory of Monopoly and RegulationTopic 3: Collusion 2013-14, Spring Term Dr Helen Weeds

  2. Monopoly power • Monopoly outcomes • monopoly pricing • price discrimination • costs, technology

  3. Routes to monopoly power Monopoly power Collude Exclude Merge

  4. Lecture outline • Collusion and reaching agreement • Sustainability • Critical discount factor • Facilitating devices • Leniency programmes • Policy and cases • Cartels • Tacit collusion

  5. What is collusion? • A type of horizontal agreement • Cooperation over prices, outputs, market shares or territories • Higher profits (at best joint profit = monopoly profit) • Worse for consumers, and social welfare • Typically per se illegal • Cartel: explicit agreement (could be verbal) • Tacit collusion / coordinated behaviour: understanding reached without explicit agreement (neither written nor verbal)

  6. Reaching agreement • Communication • “People of the same trade seldom meet together, even for merriment and diversion, but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the public, or in some contrivance to raise prices.” – Adam Smith, An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations (1776), I:10 • Number of firms • Easier to reach agreement if fewer firms • Asymmetries, e.g. costs • Efficient for low cost firms produce higher output • May require side payments (illegal)

  7. Sustaining collusion: Prisoners dilemma (1) • Strategies and payoffs • Both collude: share monopoly profit • Both defect: non-cooperative oligopoly (Bertrand) • One defects: steals entire market demand; other firm makes a small loss • Unique Nash equilibrium

  8. Infinitely repeated prisoners dilemma • Repeat stage game an infinite number of times • Discount factor  < 1 (where  = ert ) • “Grim-Trigger” strategy (or Nash reversion) • Play collude in period 1 • Continue playing collude as long as both players keep on playing collude • Otherwise play defect, permanently • Is this strategy an equilibrium?

  9. Equilibrium in grim-trigger strategies • Assume rival plays grim-trigger • Compare payoffs from trigger and defect • Trigger: payoff = 5 (1++2+ … ) = 5/(1–) • Defect: payoff = 10 • Play trigger iff: 5 /(1–)  10 •    ½ “critical discount factor” • If  is sufficiently high • Collusion is an equilibrium of the infinitely repeated game • Not unique: e.g. {defect, defect} is also an equilibrium

  10. Why Infinite Periods?

  11. Number of firms • Cartel payoff (per firm) is m /n • Critical discount factor: • Collusion requires higher  as n increases • i.e., collusion is harder to sustain for higher n

  12. What collusive price? • Bertrand • Sustainability is independent of  • Collusion may occur at any P (c, Pm]: “folk theorem” • Cournot • More complex payoff structure • Nash reversion outcome less harmful to firms

  13. Detection (or reaction) lags • Suppose defection is not detected for 2 periods • Payoffs (duopoly) • Trigger: 5 / (1–) as before • Defect: 10 (1+) receive monopoly  for 2 periods • Critical discount factor:   1/2  0.71 • Collusion is easier when • Prices (or outputs) are observable, and • Output can be increased rapidly

  14. Features conducive to collusion • Number of firms • Barriers to entry • Homogeneity • Costs, products • Bertrand outcome very unattractive • Transparency & reaction lags • Observable prices, stable/predictable demand • Frequent transactions • Capacity constraints (Brock & Scheinkman 1985) • Little incentive to cheat as cannot supply entire market demand • But ability to punish cheating is also weaker • Critical  is non-monotonic in capacity

  15. Facilitating practices • Price leadership: helps solve coordination problem • Increase observability of prices • Market transparency: public prices, basing point pricing • Information exchange: e.g. via trade association • “Meet competition” (MC): customers report on rival p’s • Commitment devices • MC clause: commitment to match rival’s price cut • “Most favoured nation” (MFN) • Entitles customer to lowest price given to any customer • Reduces incentive for selective price cuts

  16. Leniency programmes • Aim: to destabilise a cartel by providing incentives for participants to reveal it • Key features • Some probability of detection (without confessions) • Large fines for cartelisation • First to reveal cartel receives immunity from fines • Changes prisoner’s dilemma

  17. Leniency programmes: Prisoners dilemma (2) • Payoffs •  = cartel profit (per firm, cumulative) •  = probability of detection • F = size of fine • Condition for unique Nash equilibrium?

  18. Example • (e.g.  = 3,  = 1/3, F = 9 • Enforcement • Detection powers, e.g. “dawn raids”: affect  • Fines: related to turnover & duration • Third party damages

  19. The Hollywood Treatment The serious story: “Global Price Fixing”, John M. Connor (2007) (Source: Amazon)

  20. Policy towards cartels • USA • Sherman Act 1890 prohibits “trusts” and monopolisation • EU (Art. 101), UK (Competition Act 1998, Chapter I) • Prohibits agreements “which have as their object or effect the prevention, restriction or distortion of competition” • Bans price fixing, limiting production, or sharing markets • UK Enterprise Act 2002 • Makes cartelisation a criminal offence • Possible imprisonment (already possible in USA) • Claims for third party damages

  21. Prosecuting cartels • 2 main issues • Evidence of cartelisation • Could be written: cartel agreements • Oral testimony in court • Rewards for “whistleblowers” • Quantifying penalties and damages • Penalties related to turnover during period of cartelisation • Third party damages • how much did consumers overpay? • will consumers claim? Class actions

  22. Vitamin cartel (US 1999, EU 2001) • Secret price-fixing cartel, Jan 1990–Feb 1999 • Fixed prices of vitamins used in foods (bread, milk, cereal) • $5bn-worth of transactions affected • Destabilised by entry into market • Cases brought in USA (1999) and EU (2001) • Hoffman-La Roche (leader of cartel) • Fined $500m (USA) and €462m (EU): largest corporate fine to date • Marketing director pleaded guilty: $100,000 fine + 4 months in jail • BASF: fined $225m (USA) and €296m (EU) • Rhône-Poulenc (now Aventis): escaped fine in USA, in exchange for supplying evidence; fined €5m in EU

  23. Replica football kit price-fixing (OFT 2003) • 10 firms fixed prices of Umbro replica football shirts • Manufacturer: Umbro • Football clubs / league: Manchester United, the FA • Retailers: JJB Sports, Allsports, Blacks, Sports Soccer, JD Sports, Sports Connection and Sportsetail • A number of agreements to fix prices in 2000 and 2001 • Fined a total of £18.6m by OFT in August 2003 • Some reduced, and one increased, on appeal to CAT • Which? launched “representative claim” against JJB Sports on behalf of customers

  24. Policy towards tacit collusion • More difficult to identify and prosecute • Industry conduct • “Conscious parallelism” • But other possible reasons why firms may change prices at the same time; e.g. common cost shock • Estimate firms’ reactions to one another’s price changes • High responsiveness  collusion (punishment strategy) • Price leadership • Industry performance • Prices: compare with costs • Profits: compare with cost of capital

  25. Burden of proof: Woodpulp (EC 1985) • Industry conduct & performance • Price parallelism (1975–1981) • Highly visible price pre-announcements • Rising prices, unrelated to costs, despite rising stocks • Cost differences not reflected in prices • European Commission ruled concerted behaviour • Overturned by ECJ in 1993, citing other explanations • “parallel conduct cannot be regarded as furnishing proof of concertation unless concertation constitutes the only plausible explanation”

  26. UK Enterprise Act 2002 • Market investigations may be conducted • Where feature(s) of the market or conduct of suppliers prevent, restrict or distort competition • Not a cartel (otherwise tackle under CA98) • Remedies • Behavioural: change industry practices to eliminate obstacles to competition (e.g. switching barriers); price controls • Structural: break up industry • Recent Investigations • Cement/Aggregates, BAA Airports, Private healthcare, Private motor insurance, Statutory audit services

  27. Tacit collusion: White Salt (UK 1986) • UK tacit collusion case • Investigation by Monopolies and Mergers Commission (now Competition Commission) • Under Fair Trading Act 1973 (now replaced by Enterprise Act 2002) • Two major producers of salt in the UK • British Salt: 45% of market, lower cost producer • ICI: 50% of market • Lack of competition between the two • What was the evidence?

  28. Features of the salt industry • Homogenous product • Declining market: 30% fall in production 1979-86 • Barriers to entry • Large economies of scale: small scale entry suffers significant cost disadvantage • Large excess capacities: BS 75% utilisation, ICI 65% utilisation (1980-84 figures) • Use of long-term contracts foreclose much of market • Legal barriers to entry • Cheshire County Council (where the best salt deposits are) unlikely to grant new development licenses due to environmental concerns • Imports limited: transport costs high relative to value

  29. Conduct and performance • Parallel pricing and price leadership • Price changes always matched over previous 10 years • In the previous 5 years ICI had led on all price changes • Pre-notification of price changes (by letter) • Parties claimed this was necessary as they traded a small amount of salt with one another! • High prices and profits • Prices had risen faster than in other industries • High rates of return on capital • ICI: 50%; British Salt: 30% (though falling) • NB: 10-15% return might be considered reasonable

  30. MMC’s analysis • Several features that tend to support tacit collusion • Highly concentrated market (duopoly), high entry barriers • Information sharing • Capacity available for retaliation strategy • Some evidence it might be occurring • Parallel pricing and price leadership • Rising prices despite falling demand • Excessive returns on capital • Finding: “against the public interest” • BS (lower cost) failing to exert competitive pressure • Imposed price control linked to BS’s costs

  31. Rees (EJ 1993): analysis of White Salt • Examined the data to test for tacit collusion • Concluded that • given firms’ capacities, the threat of punishment was credible and would sustain collusion • though the result was not joint profit-maximising as this would require BS (with lower costs) to produce at full capacity and make side payments to ICI • [Also see MMC report at: http://www.competition-commission.org.uk/rep_pub/reports/1986/200white_salt.htm]

  32. Merger and collusion • Merger in oligopoly market (e.g. 4  3 firms) • Suppose merged firm does not have market power to raise price on its own • But smaller number of firms may sustain tacit collusion • i.e. will merger create “collective dominance”? • Merger authorities look at • Industry conditions, especially ability to punish cheating • Observability, reaction times, capacities, etc. • Calculate change in critical discount factor  • Is post-merger critical  significantly lower?

  33. Airtours (EC 1999, ECJ 2002) • Proposed merger of Airtours and First Choice • Post-merger shares (of market for foreign package holidays) • Airtours/First Choice 32%: not single-firm dominance • Thomson 27% • Thomas Cook 20% (+ competitive fringe) • European Commission blocked merger, alleging “collective dominance” • But features of market not conducive to collusion • Highly differentiated products • Capacity fixed 18 months ahead and not transparent • Volatile demand; unstable market shares • Low barriers to entry & expansion • Confusion over concept of collective dominance • Could this include unilateral effects (e.g. Cournot oligopoly)? • Overturned on appeal; caused 2004 revision of EU merger test

More Related