1 / 22

Predation

Predation. Monopolization & Predatory Behavior Predatory Pricing & Economic Theory Legal Treatment of Alleged Predation. Monopolization & Predatory Behavior. Object: enhance market power through predatory acts convince rivals to exit market, not enter or compete

hetal
Download Presentation

Predation

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. Predation Monopolization & Predatory Behavior Predatory Pricing & Economic Theory Legal Treatment of Alleged Predation

  2. Monopolization & Predatory Behavior • Object: • enhance market power through predatory acts • convince rivals to exit market, not enter or compete • once clear, exploit market power

  3. Means of Predation • classic form: predatory price cutting • impose losses on rivals until they "cry uncle" • modern extension: raising rivals costs • exclusion • exclusive contracts to deny essential facilities • upstream integration • monopolize inputs to raise cost to downstream competitors • advertising (allegedly) to raise entry costs • "frivolous" legal challenges • old but notable: sabotage/espionage • doubly illegal but part of some A-T cases

  4. Recent Cases of Alleged Predation • Classic: American Airlines & Fare Wars • Entry followed by price cuts on specific routes • A common feature of modern airline markets • not limited to American Airlines • Q: were fare cuts limited to affected routes or was did they extend to other routes • Also: Matsushita vs. Zenith (1986) • novel claim: predation was collusive

  5. Recent Cases of Alleged Predation • Raising Rivals Costs • Airline Computer Reservation Systems • United & American developed CRS that favored their flights over independents • DOJ claimed this was upstream integration into an input market (CRSs) designed to preserve/expand market power

  6. Recent Cases of Alleged Predation • Sabotage: • $1 billion verdict in UST-Conwood (2003) • case involved UST agents removing Conwood displays at tobacco retailers • Sun Microsystems vs. Microsoft (ongoing) • Sun owns Java & licenses it to developers • Java is/was a perceived threat to Windows OS • MS development tools allegedly "pollute" Java code so it bombs on non Windows platforms

  7. Predatory Price Cutting • Forms & Intent • impose losses on firms • as long as you stay you will make losses, so leave or • merge or be doomed to making losses • "discipline" rivals in a cartel • "grim strategy" in pricing games • make rival think you will resort to huge punishment if rival does not cooperate

  8. Economics of Predatory Pricing • Elements: • pricing below cost with intent to gain market power • pricing designed to impose losses on rivals • must ascertain costs: which costs are relevant? • common claim: costs of rival (incorrect) • to distinguish between normal competitive behavior: P < AVC may be predatory • "Areeda-Turner rule" endorsed by current S. Court Justice Beyer (in prior case) • But: still must distinguish between predation & promotion (free giveaways are common entry schemes)

  9. Economics of Predatory Pricing • Problems with the Strategy • Predator is generally larger than the rival •  costs incurred exceed costs imposed • easier to manage with locally targeted cuts, but disparity presumably remains • rival's optimal strategy might be to shut down temporarily and not incur any operating losses

  10. Economics of Predatory Pricing • Problems with the Strategy (cont'd) • Suppose aim is to induce firm to exit • Exit likely if assets are highly mobile • target firm sees losses in widgets so switches to making gadgets • But if assets are mobile, easy entry occurs when the predator increases price • Conclude: asset mobility is a wash for predator

  11. Economics of Predatory Pricing • Problems with the Strategy (cont'd) • Suppose assets are highly immobile • P < AVC  rational rival shuts down • Immobility  assets can't be shifted elsewhere • Problem: assets remain in the market; available to restart production when predator raises price

  12. Economics of Predatory Pricing • Potential Remedies for Predators • Develop a reputation for irrationality • Make rivals fear predator s.t. they believe predator will cut P even if it is not in own best interest •  lower likelihood of entry •  greater likelihood that merger offers accepted • OK, but basing theories on irrationality hypotheses is not good economics

  13. Legal Treatment of Predatory Pricing • Predation often alleged and accepted by courts • Economist's skepticism has altered court's practice in recent years • Two Prong Test: • 1) What is likelihood that predation could be profitable? • 2) Apply Areeda-Turner only if (1) is found likely • Failure to establish that predation could be profitable (item 1) has stopped recent cases when in past court would have been confused

  14. Matsushita v Zenith (1986) • Fairly typical case of alleged predation... • Typical in that economists think the allegation of predatory pricing was a “howler” • Atypical in that: • Alleged predation was collusive • Court accepted the expert economist’s claim that the alleged predation would have led to significant losses that could not be recouped

  15. M v Z: Zenith’s Claims • Main Allegation • 7 Japanese TV manufacturers engaged in collusive predation • Specific Claims • 1. Over a 10 year period, prices were about 60% of costs, predatory • 2. Firms agreed to minimum export prices and restricted distribution channels, collusive • 3. Losses in U.S. financed by “War Chest“ from monopolistic pricing in Japan

  16. M v Z: Plaintiffs' Defense (1) • 1. One can view the losses of below-cost pricing as an investment that yields future returns when competitors exit and price increases to monopoly levels. • What is the rate of return on this investment? Negative! It is almost impossible to recoup a decade of losses at 40 cents on the dollar with future monopoly profits. • Hence, the predation alleged by Zenith is not a rational investment.

  17. M v Z: Plaintiffs' Defense (2) • 2. Cartel theory  incentive to cheat • Cheating occurred here, but the cheating was not consistent with a predatory agreement. • P < C  cheaters want to reduce output • let others suffer the losses from predation • individual Japanese firms were undercutting the minimum prices to sell more TVs

  18. M v Z: Plaintiffs' Defense (3) • 3. War Chest • The existence of profits in one market is irrelevant to the strategy in other markets • A "War Chest" would be employed only on project with have positive net present value • Predation in this market was shown to be an unprofitable project • Similarly, if predation were a positive net present value project, it could be financed independent of the profits earned elsewhere • The "War Chest" is irrelevant.

  19. M v Z: The Court's Response • 11 years of evidence at Fed District Court • Then, case dismissed on summary judgment! • --Judge ruled that the facts presented by Zenith, if true, were inconsistent with rational predation, and a “full trial” unnecessary • --Economic theory implied claim of predation was false • Ping-pong appeals to S. Court, which accepted the District Court's reliance on economics • Cases can now be dismissed if it can be established that alleged predation had no chance of being profitable

  20. Cartel Dumping Model • PW – world price (competitive) • PDom – domestic, cartelized price • QT – total production by domestic firms • QDom – production allocated to dom mkt • (QT – QDom) – output “dumped” into export market

  21. Cartel Dumping Model

  22. Cartel Dumping Model • Japanese TV firms were domestic cartel, supported by MITI and trade barriers • Who was harmed by their strategy? • How is this similar to Addyston Pipe?

More Related