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Airline Tariff Publishing Investigation

Airline Tariff Publishing Investigation. DOJ Investigation Began in 1991 Settled by Consent Decree in 1994 Never Went to Trial. Airline Tariff Publishing Company (ATPCO). Central clearinghouse for dissemination of fare change information Airlines send information to ATPCO daily

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Airline Tariff Publishing Investigation

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  1. Airline Tariff Publishing Investigation DOJ Investigation Began in 1991 Settled by Consent Decree in 1994 Never Went to Trial

  2. Airline Tariff Publishing Company (ATPCO) • Central clearinghouse for dissemination of fare change information • Airlines send information to ATPCO daily • New fares added • Old fares removed • Existing fares changed • ATPCO sends compilation to • Computer reservation systems (CRS) • Available to travel agents and consumers • All major airlines

  3. Information Transmitted by ATPCO • Fare basis code or “name” of fare • Origin and destination airports • Price • First and last ticket dates • First and last travel dates • Restrictions • Advance purchase • Minimum stay • Blackout dates • Specific routing or set of flights

  4. Focus of Investigation • By setting a future first ticket date, an airline could announce a fare increase, but delay its implementation. • “Pre-announcement” of price changes • Ticket and travel dates as well as restrictions were submitted as footnotes to the fare. • “Footnote designators” are names for footnotes submitted by airlines • Fare basis codes and footnote designators could be used as a means of communication

  5. DOJ’s Case: December 21, 1992 • Filed charges against ATPCO and 8 airlines • Airlines used ATPCO to collude to raise prices and restrict competition • Data from ATPCO records and airlines’ internal documents • One carrier announces fare increase on future date • Other carriers announce increases on same route, often at a different fares • Iterated back and forth until all charge same fare on same date • When “agreement” was not reached, fare increase did not go into effect

  6. Multimarket Coordination • Suppose Middle Tennessee Airlines has a hub at Nashville and offers non-stop flight to New Orleans and Chicago • Mid-South Airlines has a hub at Atlanta offering non-stop flights to New Orleans and Chicago • Both also operate flights on the Atlanta-Nashville route • Each offers one-stop service in competition with the other’s non-stop flights

  7. Multimarket Coordination • Suppose MTA is unhappy with MSA’s Atlanta to Chicago fare • MTA cuts its Nashville to New Orleans fare with a short last ticket date below that offered by MSA using a basis code similar to MSA’s for Atlanta-Chicago • MTA then matches MSA’s Nashville-New Orleans fare with a first ticket date the same as the previous last ticket date • If MSA gets the message, • it ends its cheap Atlanta-Chicago fare and matches MTA’s fare on that route • with a first ticket date that is the same as MTA’s last ticket date on the cheap Nashville-New Orleans fare • Result: each carriers’ one-stop fare matches the other’s non-stop fare

  8. Airlines’ Defense • Not a per se violation of Sherman Act • Consumers benefit from fare info • Evidence: Bookings surge near end of sale, fall shortly after fare increases • Court should use a rule of reason standard • All firms respond to actions of competitors • DOJ allegations indistinguishable from competition • Pre-announcement also occurred on monopoly routes where collusion is irrelevant • No pre-announcement of price decreases • Decreases are more destabilizing to cartel behavior • Basis codes and designators not used to signal connections between fares • Unknown number of seats available for any fare • Low profits, frequency of exit implies any price-fixing is not effective at raising profits

  9. DOJ Response • Consumer benefits small in comparison to opportunity to coordinate prices • Surges occurred only on a few well-publicized occasions, not those with multiple end-date changes • Pre-announcement on monopoly routes shows some value to consumers • Pre-announcement of fare decreases were avoided because of likely antitrust problems • Remaining seat availability for a fare is known, even if total number of seats is not • Profits not relevant, collusion may raise profits (reduce losses) even when firms still lose money

  10. Remedy • When DOJ filed its case, it also filed a settlement with two airlines • United and USAir • Agreed to stop pre-announcement of fares • Tunney Act: Court must review government antitrust settlements • Other airlines opposed • DOJ said harm to conspiracy only reason to oppose • Court accepted settlement • March 17, 1994 final settlement • No restrictions on fares, but no pre-announcement • No linking with codes or designators • Expires in 10 years (2004)

  11. Subsequent Fare Setting Practices • Airlines announce fare increases on Friday afternoon effective Saturday • Traffic is low on weekends; few tickets sold • If competitors do not match by Sunday afternoon, • Increase is withdrawn Sunday night • Old fare in effect Monday morning • If competitors match the increase, the higher fare remains in effect

  12. Importance • Did not go to trial • no court decision or order • no antitrust precedent was created • Signaled the DOJ’s willingness to pursue coordinated prices made possible by rapid communication • In Economic terms, the airlines’ use of ATPCO was a facilitating practice • Still not clear if this was evidence of conspiracy (per se violation) or an illegal practice under rule of reason

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