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EC326 Industrial Economics 2- LecturesAutumn 2004.
Note: this set of material is purely a
collection of overhead transparencies puttogether; there may be overlaps or
inconsistencies. It is provided as a serviceto students but is not meant to be a
complete record of the material provided inthe lectures.
Mike WatersonPlan of Lecture 1:
1. Basic idea of competition policy andregulatory policy
2. Rationale: Loss in consumer surplus;efficiency issues (examples)
3. Forms of market power
4. Private v State action
5. Legislation (very brief outline)
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Competition Policy and Regulatory Policy
Economic surveillance of activities offirms- control of practices/ actions offirms taken against others or againstconsumers.
Why?- is there a legitimate economic
rationale?
Loss in Consumer Surplus
A
p*
MC *
D
MC
q* q s q
p
0
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* * *1 ( )( )2
s p MC q q
* * *1 .( . ).2
L p q K
Suppose L (Lerner index or price costmargin) is 0.25, K
* *( ) / sq q q is 0.2 and
revenue is 10 billion per year.
Then A is 0.25bn pa. An agency thatshaves L to 0.15 (say) reduces A to 0.15bn,reducing consumer surplus loss by 100mper year.
If the agency costs 16m a year to run, the(social) returns are over 6 times the costs,less if company required to spend a lot.These figures are, in round numbers,roughly accurate for OFTEL (immediatepredecessor to OFCOM in telecoms).
In addition, the agency may force the firminto cost reductions.
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Hence the (economists) case for a dedicatedagency.
Some industries do not have, or needdedicated regulators, but may requireattention from time to time- maybe toosmall or only occasionally a problem (e.g.buses?).
Idea: to promote Effective Competition.
-Market Power is a fundamental marketfailure (as seen above).
Also, competitive pressures means lesslikely to get inefficiency in cost structures,except where natural monopoly- again adistinction between regulated areas andthose subject to general competition policymeasures.
Plan- to cover Competition Policy (general)this term, regulation next term.
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Forms of Market Power
Most obvious manifestation of marketpower is monopoly, but it takes many otherforms (mostly horizontal). For example:
Horizontal restrictions amongstcompetitors (cartels)
Vertical restraints (distributionagreements)Mergers (horizontal and, perhaps,vertical)Regulations preventing entry or pricerivalryConsumer switching costs, inertia, etc(lack of information/ biased info)Product tying to extend market power
We will cover issues relating to most ofthese.
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Private v state action
Why not leave people who are overcharged
to claim through the legal system?
May be many people affected to a smallextent; difficulty of class actionsMay be more costly than setting up anagency
Likely to get too much activity in somearea, not enough in others (e.g. firmscompetitors; people in the verticalchain)
However, some regimes do allow orencourage private action; US a leadingexample.
State action
Most countries have competition (antitrust)policy- starting with US, over 100 years
ago; many also have (economic) regulatoryagencies, associated with privatisation/liberalisation, to tackle these issues.
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Main areas of competition policy:
Restrictive agreements (Article 81 EU,
Chapter I UK Competition Act 1998)
Abuse of a Dominant Position (Article 82EU; Chapter II, UK CA1998)
Merger Legislation- Enterprise Act 2002 inUK replaces earlier legislation (as fromJune 2003).
EC326 Industrial Economics 2- Lecture 2
Plan of lecture:
1. UK legislation (very brief outline)
2. Market definition (1):
Need to define markets
Dimensions of market definition
The SSNIP test
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Market Definition in competition policy
Do we need to define markets?
If so, why?How do we do it in practice?What information do we need?
First perceived need to define market was inrelation to mergers. If two firms merge, howsignificant is that? How are consumers
affected? Depends on what the market is.
Depends on whether products have acompetitive impact on each other (imposerestraint on each other, not whether theproducts resemble each other).
Markets have a product dimension, a spatial orgeographic dimension and a time dimension:The market for PCs in the UK in 2003
Product dimension clearly important- is it themarket for bananas, or all fruit? (Demand sidesubstitutability.) One firm could be dominant in
bananas but not in fruit generally.
Geographical dimension is important- Mergerof book chains v Funeral chains.Market for funerals quite localised, for bookpurchases may be global.
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How do we decide what the relevant market is?
The method that has now become standard is
the SSNIP Test:
A market is defined as a product or a group of products and a geographic area in which it isproduced or sold such that a hypothetical profit-maximising firm, not subject to price regulation,that was the only present and future produceror seller of those products in that area likelywould impose at least a small but significant andnon-transitory increase in price [above thecompetitive level], assuming the terms of sale ofall other products are held constant. A relevantmarket is a group of products and a geographicarea that is no bigger than necessary to satisfythis test.
Comes from US Merger guidelines since 1982,plus EC guidelines and more recently UKcompetition policy.
Need to unpack this.
1. Defining market, not measuring marketpower
2. Note the product and geographydimensions, plus time
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3. Idea of hypothetical monopolist in theproduct- not an actual monopolist
4. Logic of test- see below
5. What is Small but Significant? - normally 5-10% (Arbitrary)6. Non-uniqueness- minimum market size is
relevant.7. Cellophane fallacy- implicit. Later
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Logic of Test
Petrol station example- suppose single station
increases price by 5%. Likely to lose most ofsales. So not a market.Suppose all stations in Coventry raise prices by5%. Will lose sales, but more than 5%?All stations in UK- will hardly lose sales at all.Conclusion: Market somewhere between city-level and national in geographic terms.
Product terms: Are petrol and diesel separatemarkets? If all stations raised price of unleadedby 5%, keeping diesel the same, what wouldhappen?
Methods of gathering information
SSNIP Test relates implicitly to elasticity ofdemand for a good (amongst other things)
Is the elasticity smaller than a critical value?
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2 1 2 2 1 1
22 1
1
1 1
2 1
1 1
1 1
1
( ) ; 1, 2
0 if ( ) ( )
i .e .
w h e re ( ) /
L e t / w h e re ( )
T h e n c o n d i tio n b e c o m e s
( )( ) o r
1 0
i.e . - 1
B u
i i i p c q i
p c q p c q
p c q m q p
m p c p
t p p p p p
m t q q m qq q
m t q q
m t qt q
1
1 1
t by d e f in i tion , e l a s ti c ity o f de m an d1
T h e r e f o r e , su b s t it u t in g i n , w e h a v e a c o n d i t io
1
T h u s th e c r i ti c a l d e m a n d e la s t ic i ty m u s
p q q E
p q t q
E m t
t sa t is Note the somewhat arbitrary nature of the t value, 5% makes some difference.
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(This demonstration is a variant of those inChurch and Ware)
If we have an estimate for the margin, and wehave (or can conjecture) values for the elasticityof demand at various levels of aggregation, wecan see whether the SSNIP test is satisfied.
Note that with a more general cost function, e.g.one exhibiting economies of scale, costs wouldcome into the picture as well as demand.
Note also that for a monopolist, 1/m E .Hence the test cannot be satisfied at monopolyprices. This is one way of seeing theCellophane fallacy. At a competitive price
level, cellophane may be a product by itself.However, at inflated (monopoly) prices, othersubstitutes will come into play. The test, bydefinition, would not be satisfied. If the actualmonopolist could raise price profitably, it wouldhave done it. This is more of a consideration inDominance cases than in merger cases.
EC326 Industrial Economics 2- Lecture 3Plan of lecture:
Market Definition (2)
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1. The SSNIP test and Elasticity of Demand
2. (Brief) The Cellophane fallacy-
dominance3. Methods of obtaining information relevant
to market definition
(Additional sources- Lexecon: Quantitativetechniques in competition analysis, 1991 and
Market Definition, 2001)
Methods of evaluating the extent of themarket
1. Elasticity estimates
Clearly the most directly connected to theSSNIP test- relevance of own price elasticities.
Involves estimating demand functions; may notbe easy in some cases.Historical experience by definition
Difficulty with differentiated products- mayinvolve many parameters- various techniquesare used to reduce these (Hedonic pricing
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methods etc). Perhaps most useful is anapproach which nests estimation into severallevels of decision (Hausman).
2. Price trend / correlation analysis
Relies on the idea that products with high crosselasticities (and therefore likely to be in thesame market) are likely to trend closely togetherin prices. (Or, the other way round, if theirprice movements diverge, they are unlikely to bein the same market- perhaps better at ruling outcases).May suggest the direction in which the marketdefinition should be expanded if the test is notpassed with a narrow definition.
For example, price divergence, or different pricepatterns, between different countries (e.g.cars).
Measured as correlation- but how high is high?What about speed of adjustment? What aboutdifficulty of identifying trends from randomwalks/ common factors across markets?
3. Consumer surveys
How many buyers would actually switch?-Direct method, but does involve a hypothetical.
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Can be targeted at specific issues undercontention.
4. Corroborative evidence
Is there evidence from the firms themselves thatsuggests something about the relevant market?
What about shipment data, board minutes,trade barriers etc?Time is a relevant factor in an investigation.After-markets.EC326 Industrial Economics 2- Lecture 4
Plan:
Assessment of Market Power
Traditional- Measuring concentration
Measuring/ evaluating market shares
Econometric analysis of residual demand
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Concentration
Questions:
How can we measure it?Why is it important?
General Motivation:
More concentrated industries are likely to havemore market power.
So, once a market has been defined, it isimportant to evaluate the degree ofconcentration in a market.
(We will examine both these issues in moredetail.)
Measuring concentration
If all firms were the same size, concentrationwould simply be the inverse of number of firms.But they are not.
Concentration takes into account both numbers(inversely) and size inequalities (directly). Tosome extent, how this is done is arbitrary.
Two main measures in wide use (many othershave been developed):
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Concentration Ratio
1
so 0 1n
i i ii
CR s CR
Hirshman-Herfindahl Index
2
1
so 0 1 if is a sharen
i i
i
HHI s HHI s
between 0 and 10,000 if si is a percent.
Example using Car market (assuming cars inthe UK are a legitimate market) for 2003.
Merger of two firms definitely increases HHI,will not decrease CR.
[2 2 2( ) 2a b a b ab ]
Exit of one firm, followed by proportionalreallocation, will increase both measures.
Fiat merger with GM raises HHI by almost 100points. Collapse of Fiat raises HHI by around62 points ( assuming proportional reallocation ).
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US antitrust authorities have a set of guidelines(1992 Guidelines) relating to antitrust markets.These refer explicitly to particular levels of HHI
and increases in those levels as a result of amerger. Below these levels, mergers are OK.The hypothetical GM/ Fiat merger would notquite be caught under these guidelines (butwould under a narrower definition of themarket).
Question is why this might be relevant toanything.
Relates to influence of concentration onNon-collusive market power- Link betweenconcentration and Lerner index, e.g. underCournot
L = H/E
Likelihood of collusion
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Market shares
Once market has been defined, evaluating
market share is commonly very easy.
How large a share is needed to mean a firm isdominant?
Largely ad hoc- OFT reckons beyond 50% itcan be presumed, below 40% unlikely.
Note also that L i = s i/E
But high market share may not be important if- Entry is easy, or- There is significant buyer power.
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Estimating market power directly
Essentially, comes from estimates of demand,
to establish price elasticities, etc.
Straightforward method- estimate residualelasticity of demand. (There are also other methods, e.g. logit basedapproaches.)
Demand facing this firm is:( , , )i i i iq D p p y
and its best reply function can be written as( , , , )i i i i p R p y w c
(assuming price is the strategic variable).
From the set of best reply functions, bysubstituting in to the demand function forfirm i, we obtain the residual demand facingfirm i as:
( , , , ) R Ri i i iq D p w c y
This can be estimated as, for example:
ln ln Ri i i i i i i i j i
q p y w c u where we instrument for p i using ci.
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The coefficient i is an estimate of residualdemand elasticity, and so (an inversemeasure) of this firms market power.
Logit approach involves estimatingdemands in a hedonic demand-type manner.
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Why are some industries concentrated, others
not?
Economies of scale; product proliferation;barriers to entry; differential efficiency; chance.
1. Economies of scale:
Some markets have greater scale economies, orrather greater scale economies relative to marketsize .
Steel production takes place best in large plants,as a result of scale economies. Similarly,brewing of keg/ bottled beers (but notnecessarily cask ales).
There will be fewer brewers in Guernsey than inEngland.
Bresnahan and Reiss demonstration of theimportance of market size.
So some industries will be more concentratedthan others. In small economies, most industrieswill be more concentrated than in large ones.
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Gilbert: A barrier to entry is a rent derivedfrom incumbency; the additional profit that afirm can earn as a sole consequence of being
established in an industry.
(not the only definition)
List of barriers (mainly Bain):
Absolute cost advantage- will return tothis
Product differentiation advantagesEconomies of scale/ experience/ scopeLegal barriers
Economies of scale and limit pricing
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p mp L
AC
Demand
q
p Limit Pricing
MC e
MR
q L
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Assumes incumbent is in a superior position to apotential entrant, as a result of being anincumbent. A firm may want to put itself in
such a position- see Consequences ofconcentration. But why should an entrantassume the incumbent keeps output fixed inresponse to entry?- usually non-optimal.(Relates also to actions such as predatorypricing, to be discussed later).
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The other non-legal barriers relate toDifferential Efficiency
Some firms may be more efficient than others.As a result, they may grow/be larger.
One plausible mechanism- Cournot withdifferential costs. (there are others)
i = P(Q).q i - c i.q i; p P(Q); Q q i (1)
FOC:i q i = P .q i + p - c i = 0 (2)
(Cournot assumption)
From (2):L i (p - c i)/p = - P .q i/p = - (P .Q/p).q i/Q
L i = s i/
(L i is commonly called the price-cost margin)
Note that the larger firms have higher margins,due to lower costs- so firms are large because they are efficient.
If there is a degree of co-ordination:i q i = P . iq i + p - c i = 0
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effect on other firms outputs through i.Hence instead of (3) we get:
L i = s i /
where 1/s i > > 1.
So two alternative predictions , leading to thesame aggregate result, that more concentratedindustries are more profitable:
1. Actions of the firms in the industry- all may
be profitable (maybe by co-ordination).2. Differential efficiency (Demsetz)- the larger
ones have the larger margins. As a result,the industry is more concentrated (firmsmore unequal in size).
Can test between these predictions by looking at
intra-industry data. If Demsetz is right, slope ofintra-industry relationship between marginsand size is very steep. If it is relatively flat,there is a degree of co-ordination.
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Clarke, Davies and Waterson (J Ind Econ, 1984)did this. They first examined intra-industryrelationships, using the form:
2ii i p c a bs cs p
then (for that subset of the cases where b waspositive) related the estimate of cross-sectionally to concentration, getting positiveresults.
Conclusion: Differential efficiency is not thewhole explanation, and concentration is of someimportance for behaviour in the industry.
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Consequences of Concentration
Concentration of itself is not a bad thing-
newsagent example
May have some positive impacts- e.g.standardisation, particularly when openstandards prevail (IBM and the PC)
But concentration may have adverse impacts-
(a) Unilateral effects (one firms actions byitself)- relates to Chapter 2 of Competition Act1998 and
(b) Coordinated effects (several firms colludingtogether)- relates to Chapter 1 of CC 1998
EC326- Industrial Economics 2- Lecture 6
Consequences of Concentration
Unilateral effects- framework
Concentration of itself is not a bad thing-newsagent example
May have some positive impacts- e.g.standardisation, particularly when openstandards prevail (IBM and the PC)
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But concentration may have adverse impacts-
(a) Unilateral effects (one firms actions byitself)- relates to Chapter 2 of Competition Act1998 and
(b) Coordinated effects (several firms colludingtogether)- relates to Chapter 1 of CC 1998
Will consider both these (may be some overlapwith Ind Ec 1) over next couple of lectures
Common example of unilateral effect:Exclusionary behaviour- attempt to keep firmsout of an area
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Basic two stage game:1. Entrant makes move2. Incumbent reacts.
An Entry Game
1
2
Entrant
Stay Out
Enter IncumbentFight
Acquiesce
( m , 0)
( w, w)
( d, d)
Assume m > d > w
Situation 1: d < 0 Nash equilibrium is ( m, 0). Entry is blockaded
Situation 2: d > 0 > w Two Nash equilibria (a) (fight if entry, stay out)
(b) (acquiesce, enter)
One subgame perfect equilibrium- (b)
The other equilibrium is not credible(though see later)
Two ways a powerful incumbent firm might tacklethis- pre-commitment or predation.
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qm qd qw0 q
MC incumbent
Example of Commitment
w
w+c
Examples of instruments here: Advertising,creation of capacity, R&D activity etc. To eitherexclude or weaken opponent
Effect of reducing own costs, assumingcompetition is in quantities:
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q 1
q 2
q 1 = q 1(q 2, w+c)
Best Reply Functions- quantity space
0
N1
M 1
q 2 = q 2(q 1)
q 1=q 1(q 2, w)
N2
Your output rises, rivals falls; maybe notenough demand to satisfy rival.
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Best Reply Functions- pricesp2
p1
p1=p 1(p 2 , c+w)p1=p 1(p 2, c)
p2=p 2(p 1, c)
p2=p 2(p 1, c+k)
12
3
The benefit of raising rival's costs rather than reducing own costs
Reducing own costs makes you worse off in thisform of competition (strategic complements).Need to raise rivals costs.
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Implies need for imperfect information orirrationality on part of incumbent- importanceof Reputation .
1
2
Entrant
Stay Out
Enter IncumbentFight
Acquiesce
( m , 0)
( w, w)
( d, d)
1
2
Entrant
Stay Out
Enter IncumbentFight
Acquiesce
( m , 0)
( w, w)
( d, d)
Nature
"Sane"
"Crazy"
0
Examples: Cabral- Easyjet v KLM; Buses.
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Predatory pricing- works by setting a lowerprice to compete aggressively, then raising pricelater, once opposition has been seen off.
Highlights problem for policy (in all theseareas)- how to distinguish between competitiveresponse and anti-competitive action. Policy-maker has no desire to stifle competition.
Method normally used (in case of predatorypricing): A price is predatory if it is belowaverage variable cost (or average avoidablecost). Marginal cost and multiproductproblems.(Called Areeda Turner rules in US)
A price of zero will normally be consideredpredatory.
Examples- buses; Aberdeen papers.
Important problem- cannot identify the intentthrough pricing levels; need additional evidence(eg timing).
Aberdeen Herald and Post:
March 96 To Sept 98 To Sept 99 To April 00
Ad price cut Further cut Dist reducedInc pages More pages Pag reduced
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EC326- Industrial Economics 2- Lecture 7
Consequences of Concentration (continued)
Plan:Unilateral effects- policy considerationsCo-ordinated effects- introduction
A. Unilateral Effects (last time)
Actions taken by individual powerful firms inorder to reduce, weaken, or eliminatecompetition e.g. strategic actions to deter entry.
Reducing own costs by pre-emptive move-examples: advertising/ R&D activity
Raising rivals costs- examples: VirginAtlantic
Predatory pricing
General difficulty for policy: When are suchactions a part of the normal competitive process
and when are they designed unfairly to removerivals?
To determine this requires competition agenciesto judge a difficult tradeoff.
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Examples relating to costs:
1. Extended warranties offered by electrical
retailers.2. Information for the use of diagnosticequipment by independent garages (n.b.intellectual property)
Predatory pricing examples:1. Robert Wiseman dairies2. Aberdeen newspapers
Particular difficulties in predatory pricingcases:
Predatory Pricing
Set price below costs, in a deliberate attempt toshow strength to drive an entrant out.
You make losses, but entrants are driven outanyway, so long term gain.
Highlights problem for policy (in all these
areas)- how to distinguish between competitiveresponse and anti-competitive action. Policy-maker has no desire to stifle competition.
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Method normally used (in case of predatorypricing): A price is predatory if it is belowaverage variable cost (or average avoidable
cost). Marginal cost and multiproductproblems.(Called Areeda Turner rules in US)
A price of zero will normally be consideredpredatory.
Examples- buses; Aberdeen papers.
Intent?/ Timing?
Aberdeen Herald and Post:
March 96 To Sept 98 To Sept 99 To April 00
Ad price cut Further cut Dist reducedInc pages More pages Pag reduced
Aberdeen Herald and Post fined 1.3m, reducedon appeal to 1m.
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B. Co-ordinated Effects
Actions taken by a group of firms to benefit
themselves at the expense of others
If firms coordinate their pricing across anindustry, they can benefit as a group
Alternatively, they may agree to share a market(for example, by agreeing mutually exclusiveterritories) with the same effect.
Difficulties in the way of doing this:1. Predict and discourage production by non-
members2. Locate the points providing maximum
profits3. Choose an outcome from the above4. Detect breaches of the agreement5. Deter such breaches
Collusion can be explicit or tacit. If it is illegal,then the agreement has either to be secret ortacit.
In most jurisdictions, discussing prices withcompetitors, or engaging in actions with thesame effect, are illegal. (UK, Competition Act1998, Chapter1; Enterprise Act 2002 adds
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criminal penalties). Much tougher thanunilateral actions.
So legal difficulties also.
EC326 Industrial Economics 2: Lecture 8
Plan:
Why are competition authorities tough oncartel or collusive behaviour?Under what circumstances are cartels mostlikely?What effects do penalties have?Examples.
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Reasons for competition authorities beingtough on collusive behaviour
pm
pd
qm qd
D
MC
MR
0
Price under collusion and Cournot
Increased monopoly welfare loss. No obviousoffsetting benefits (e.g. scale economies). Firms
benefit but consumers lose out to greater extent.
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(Note however the difference between tacit andexplicit collusion- important legally but notmade explicit in many economics models.)
When do firms have least difficulty in reachingan agreement?
Conceptual framework (from IE1):
Very simple 2 firm collusion model:
2C D
1 C (c, c) (-l, d)D (d, -l) (0, 0)
Collude if better off, i.e. if c forever better thand for one period, or:
1c
d i.e.
d cd
More generally, collude if:
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or
where
is pdv of my profit if everyone colludes
is pdv of my profit in punishment phase.
c c d pi i i i
d ci ic p
i i
ci
p
i
V V
V V
V
V
The lower is the necessary value of , the morelikely is collusion.
So anything that raises the numerator, reducesthe likelihood of collusion and anything that
raises the denominator increases the likelihoodof collusion.
1. Where firm numbers are small and known(hence the link with concentration)
So it is easier to assess what others are doing and benefits from collusion are high
2. When the people involved naturally meet todiscuss matters of common interest, or caneasily understand how other firms think.
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Example: Many professional associations
3. When the products are homogeneous andcosts are similar
Less ability to add to quality in order tocapture a greater share of the market. Lessasymmetry in the industry, so smaller needfor side-payments which may be difficult.
4. Where pricing is transparent
An example is in auctions for rights tosomething. If all bids are reported, they maybe seen to contain signals to other players.Examples from Klemperer. Also constructioncontracts.
Also, advanced notification of price changes (SeeChurch, ch 10 for Danish Cement and Airlinecases)
5. Where retaliation is swift and tough (forreasons above or others, eg consumer policing
of price changes)
6. Where everyone is doing badly (cyclicalindustry?)-
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Examples: cement; fertiliser; bulk chemicals.
Impact of policy that cartels are illegal
Attempt to reduce/ eliminate power ofcartels.
1. Even if there is no penalty, illegality makescartel agreements unenforceable and sidepayments very difficult.
2. If there is a penalty, this reduces thepresent value of the collusive profit streamby the expected value of the fine.
3. Leniency for whistleblowing- reduces costof reneging on agreement.
4. Criminal penalties.
Examples:
Replica football kit.
Roofing contractors in West Midlands.
Cartels in vitamins, etc.EC326 Industrial Economics 2- Lecture 9
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Cartel examples- some more detail
Mergers 1
Motives for merger
Types of merger/ takeover
Horizontal mergers and profitability
Note for later: Policy here concernssomething in prospect, not something that isgoing on now.
Do horizontal mergers raise profitability?
Certainly, they increase market power, butnot necessarily profit.
Types of Merger/ Takeover
Vertical; Horizontal; Conglomerate
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Vertical- example BskyB/ ManchesterUnited (disallowed)
For reasons connected with vertical
integration. May increase horizontalmarket power in some cases as a result.
Horizontal- examples Astra/ Zeneca andP&O Princess Cruises and Royal CaribbeanCruises.For reasons connected with oligopoly orefficiency?- see later
Conglomerate/ Diversified- examplesBritish Match/ Wilkinson Sword and Suez(Lyonnais des Eaux)/ Tractebel
For efficiency reasons??
EC326 Industrial Economics 2- Lecture 10
Mergers 2
Modelling what we may expect in a merger-profitability etc.
Assessing the effects of a merger-Procedure (Enterprise Act 2002, came intoforce June 2003).Analysis (UK)
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Horizontal mergers and profitability
Salant, Switzer, Reynolds- type model.
Predictions: In the absence of efficiencies,merged parties worse off, other parties betteroff.
Differentiated product Bertrand models:Merged parties can become better off and non-merged parties do. (see eg Church and Ware,pp722-4).
Implication: Industry players not party to themerger may be quite happy about it.
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Procedure in assessing effects:More on procedure from OFT website (searchfor mergers).
Actors: Office of Fair Trading (OFT),Competition Commission (CC), CompetitionAppeal Tribunal (CAT), European Commission(EC).
OFT has a duty to obtain information relatingto merger situations and to refer to CC any suchwhere the merger may result in a substantiallessening of competition [SLC] in a UKmarket.
CCs role is to investigate mergers referred to it,to see whether there has been (or would be) anSLC. If so, the CC has to determine anappropriate remedy.Once remedy (e.g. merger not allowed) isimposed, the only recourse of aggrieved partiesis to the CAT.
Under the EC Merger Regulation, large mergersthat have a Community Dimension arehandled by the EC.
1. How does the OFT find out about mergers?Answer: Usually, it will be in the interest ofthe companies involved to inform the OFT.
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2. What can companies do if they want tomerge? A: Obtain advice/ guidance fromOFT. Or pre-notify the OFT. If pre-
notified, OFT should give a response within20/ 40 working days, or merger allowed.3. Is there a size below which merger is not
considered? A: Yes,
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7. What happens then? A: Either the mergingparties provide undertakings, e.g. todivest aspects of the operations, or
behavioural undertakings (less common), orthe merger is referred to the CC.8. What happens at the CC? A: CC
investigates whether a merger situation hasbeen created and, if so, whether it is likelyto result in a SLC. If it does find SLC, itdetermines what action should be taken. Itprovides a report on this. The action wouldbe something like proposing that the mergeris prohibited, that some break up or sell-offof assets is required, or whatever. So OFTis a screening device, CC makes detailedinvestigation and determines what willhappen following that.
9. When are mergers subject to EC MergerRegulation? A: If the combined worldwideturnover of all undertakings concerned ismore than 5 billion and Communityturnover more than 250 million, orcombined more than 2.5 billion and morethan three member states >100m, unlessoperates more than 2/3 within one state. So,purely domestic cases not covered, but 2 USfirms merging could be!
10. What are the main differences? A: Thetest in the EC is whether a merger createsor strengthens a Dominant Position. Some
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mergers may not do this, yet would becaught by the SLC test.
Main changes from previous legislation:1. The CC is now a determinative body.2. SLC has replaced the public interest.
Method of Analysis:
CC considers the definition of the market,using SSNIP etc. It then determines thedegree of competition in the market and howmuch that will be affected by the merger. Indoing so, it takes into account the views of theparties and the views of third parties. It isconcerned in general with impact on rivalry,specifically non-coordinated (unilateral) andco-ordinated effects, also efficiencies andpotential for entry and role of buyer power.
Normally, it does not model these thingsexplicitly. Nor does it carry out back of theenvelope calculations; more generally, itshies away from quantitative analysis at thefront end. In these senses, this is differentfrom the US procedure.
Example: Supermarkets report (500+pp)-some GIS analysis, though.
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Example of UK approach
Knauf- Superglass proposed merger (the story
continued)
Three players in glass fibre loft insulation:Knauf, Superglass, BGI.
Knauf and Superglass together have around80% share of the loft roll market in UK, about2/3 of the blowing wool market. In mineral woolin total (inc slabs), 50-60%.
There is significant price evidence that whencapacity is reached, realised prices start to rise-around 30% increase so far this year.
Modelling- is it beneficial for the merged entityartificially to restrict output in the presence ofexcess capacity?
Answer, broadly, yes. See tables.
Conclusion: There is likely to be a substantiallessening of competition.
Note: BGI happy about merger.
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EC 326 Industrial Economics 2- Lecture 11
Mergers 3: Benefits and costs of mergers-
Quantification
Benefits to firm- higher profits as a result of:higher prices, lower costs, more efficientoperation.
Benefits to consumers- more efficient operation?
Costs to customers- higher prices (SLC)
Costs to firm- cost of notifying and time taken ininvestigation.
Costs of investigation may be socially wasteful.
OFT Economic Discussion Paper 4: Thedevelopment of targets for consumer savingsarising from competition policy (OFT 386)-discusses many of these issues.
Back of the envelope calculations of priceincreases from merger.
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1. Take the homogeneous product model alreadyconsidered:
Demand: p = 1-QCosts: C i = c iq i
i i i i pq c q so that
0i i i i ii
dp p q c p q c
q dQ
(2)
for all i. Hence, summing across all the firms:
0i Np Q c then substituting for Q
( 1) 1 0i N p c (3)If one firm, marginal cost c x leaves throughmerger, then (3) becomes:
1 ( ) 0 A i x Np c c (4)
Subtracting (4) from (3) and rearranging yieldsthe proportional price increase as a result ofmerger, assuming only unilateral effects:
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1. x A
p c p p p p N
(This formula actually works for any lineardemand curve).
Example:Brintel and Bond (helicopters). Market sharesin North Sea Northern sector:
Brintel, 22%, Bond, 23%, Bristow, 55%.Brintels margin is 10%. Implied price rise:3.3%.
2. Differentiated products:
When two products (or product lines) are
combined, the firm will take account ofinterdependencies between them. But howmuch will one impact on the other? Supposefirm raises price of A by 10%. Then quantitysold falls by 10 %. Some demand (a fraction D)diverted to product B.
But if firm owns product B and raises its priceby 10% also, that demand is not lost. Hencedemand only falls by 10 (1-D)%- demand lesselastic in effect (ignoring demand lostaltogether).
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Pre-merger margin of exiting firm:( ) / 1/m p mc p (5)
Post-merger margin of combined firm:( ) / 1/(1 ) A A Am p mc p D (6)
Combining (5) and (6), substituting out for mcand rearranging using (5) yields:
1
A p p Dm
p D m (7)
This is an expression for proportionate increasein price following merger, assuming no costefficiencies.
Example:Littlewoods and FreemansFirm Market shareMargin, %GUS 40.6 8.2Littlewoods 27.9 4.8Freemans 13.1 4.4Grattan 10.4 3.8Empire 8.1 6
Total 100
Here D=13.1/72.1= 0.182; m=0.044Hence, from (7), (p A-p)/p = 0.01
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Costs to firm of investigation
PWC report: A tax on mergers? (June 2003)
Attempts to measure cost to business of multi- jurisdictional merger reviews
External costs- costs incurred by advisors
Internal costs- costs of management time etc.
Based on a small sample:
External costs: 1.86mInternal costs: 0.33m average
Costs incurred highest in the US on average; EUalso quite high. Most incurred if merger subjectto detailed review. Legal fees the biggestelement.Costs
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EC 326: Industrial Economics 2: 12 th Lecture
Consumers and Competition Policy
Why do consumers have a role to play?
Can policy relating to consumers have animpact?
Example: Domestic Electricity
Existing ProductIncumbent supplier
New Product
Search forsupplier
Search fornew supplier
Decisionto switch
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Two features of consumers which impactdirectly on competition:(i) The nature of their search behaviour- how
much do they search and how many playersdo they search amongst.(ii) How they respond to differences in prices
between players in the industry.
Two public policy questions:
(i) Can/ should policy influence search
behaviour?(ii) Is there a policy role for the emphasis of
similarities between products?
A paradox about competition:If everyone thinks the competitive processworks well, it doesn't work
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Theoretical propositions
P1. Subject to some mild restrictions, if eachconsumer searches only one firm prior to thepurchase decision, the pricing outcome is at themonopoly level, regardless of the number offirms in the market.
(Diamond variant)
P2. The higher the proportion of activesearchers (1- , all other things equal, thegreater the proportion of low cost firms ( .The high cost firms charge monopoly price, thelow cost firms charge a breakeven price equal toaverage cost at their full capacity.
(Carlton and Perloff variant of Salop/Stiglitz)
P2a. With asymmetric search costs, pricedispersion can occur in (mixed) equilibrium, butas the proportion of well-informed consumersrises, prices fall. (Stahl)
P3. In markets where consumers search costsare significant, the monopoly price can be theNash equilibrium outcome. In somecircumstances, this is the more likely, the larger the number of firms in the industry.(Various- prediction regarding numbers differs)
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P4. In markets where firms can discriminatebetween old and new customers, and switchingcosts are significant, prices are lower in the first
(new) period and higher in the second (old)period than if there were no switching costs inthe second period.
(Klemperer)
P5. In markets where no discrimination betweennew and old customers is feasible then, subject
to certain parameter configurations, firms'prices are higher with switching costs than intheir absence. In steady state, given switchingcosts, prices increase as turnover of customersfalls and as customers become more particularabout which product they buy.(Klemperer)
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DTI SurveyPercent switched/ considering switching across marketfive year period
Product Switched Considered it Neither
Gas 37 15 48
Electricity 26 (now 36%) 13 61
Fixed-line telecom 11 18 71
Home insurance 30 23 47Car insurance 53 21 26
Bank current acc. 6 15 79
Mortgage 12 32 56
Source: DTI (2000)
Do consumers shop around for importantpurchases?
OFT survey results on recent importantpurchase (2004 report)Did not shop around 40%
Went to a couple of shops 31%Went to a number of shops 16%Shopped around/ did lot of research 11%
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Competition in ElectricityAwarenessHomogeneous product?
Savings to be madeNumber of suppliers- no race to the bottomNo evidence of rapid convergence in pricesLittle evidence of randomised prices (as inmany search models)Consumer perception of high search andswitching costs
A potentially competitive market
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Showing the benefits versus costs of keepingprice above competitors
MonthlySaving,
Wouldswitchaway
Additionalswitchers
Gainfromraisingprice
lossfromraisingprice
Net gain from raiprice above prevlevel
1 222 57 35 806 35 7714 175 118 1376 236 1140
6 325 150 1076 600 4768 376 51 974 306 66810 580 204 566 1632 -106612 597 17 532 170 36214 617 20 492 240 25216 645 28 436 392 44
20 679 34 736 544 192
Role for Policy
Focus on role of keeping consumers informed,enabling them to search suppliers
Some switching/ search costs may be desirable,but if too great, they can impact heavily oncompetition
Role of advertising/ internet EC326- Industrial Economics 2- 13 th Lecture
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Vertical Control I
Vertical Integration- Definitions andApproaches (revision)
Market power issues- Double marginalisation
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Upstream stage A
Downstream stage B
Consumers
ForwardIntegration
Definitions of
VerticalRelationships
Approaches:
Transactions costs/ Contractual rightsCoase; Williamson/ Grossman-Hart-Moore
Market power/ Strategic
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p
pB
pApJ
0 qB qJ
MR A MR B=D A Demand
Upstream cost
q
Double Marginalisation
B = p BqB - p Aq A
MR B = p A
c
A = MR BqA - cq A
MR A = c
J = p BqB - cq A
Incentive to integrate/ engage in non-linear pricing
Numerical example:
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1
(1 )
1 2 0 1 2
(1 2 )
1 4 0
(1 ) / 4
(1 ) / 2
(3 ) / 4
If integrated:
(1 ) / 2
(1 ) / 2
B B
B B B A B
B B A A B
B
A B
A A A A
A A
A
A B
A
B
B
B
p q
q q p q
q p p qq
q q
q q cq
q cq
q q c
p c
p c
q c
p c
Simplified version but contains main issues.
So far, VI a good thing
Vertical mergers in oligopoly
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(Abiru et al) setup:
m downstream firms
Consumers
N upstream firms M a
P A
P B
( , ) 2 N m .Here, a number of possibilities. Firms may ormay not want to merge; even if it is collectivelyprofitable.
However, all integration that takes place lowers
price, so increases welfare, although firmnumbers may shrink slightly.
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Variable proportions
Input C
Input M
Isoquant
Isocost lineslope =-c M/cC
Isocost lineslope = -p M/cC
Efficient expansionpath
Distortion in factor proportions
0
Input C Input M
Product Y
Variable proportions
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Extension of monopoly to other areas. Mayraise prices, through increased power over finalprice. So a possible concern of policy.
Entry:Integration can make entry more difficult, byremoving possible market outlets.
Upstream
Downstream
Argued in the case of Beer, for example
(discussed later)
EC326- Industrial Economics 2- 14 th Lecture
Vertical Control 2
Vertical restraints (introduction)Methods of control short of integration
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Table - Types of Vertical Restraints
Form ExamplesNon-linearPricing
Two-part tariff with a franchise fee plusa constant per-unit charge. Aggregatedrebate scheme with discounts for takingfull product range
QuantityForcing
A specified minimum quantity theretailer is required to distribute; e.g.beer sales in tenanted public houses
ServiceRequirements
A specified level of pre- and post-salesservice or promotional effort. Usingtrademarked equipment; e.g. fast-foodfranchises
Resale PriceMaintenance
Retail price fixed by the producer; e.g.the book market. A price floor or priceceiling
Refusal toSupply
Selective distribution limiting thenumber or distributors; e.g. finefragrances
ExclusiveDistribution
Distributors assigned exclusivity withina geographic area or over a particularclass of consumer or goods; e.g.newspaper distribution
ExclusiveDealing
The retailer is prohibited from stockingcompeting products; e.g. petrol retailing
Tie-in Sales Distributors contractually required totake other products, or even, with full-line forcing, an entire product range
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4. Service requirements
In cases where these are important, they can beimposed so long as there is enough headroomin the max RPM price, or whatever.
These methods can also be used in a one tomany framework. Here, an exclusiveterritory will often be allocated in order to givean element of profit to the downstream firm thatcan be used to persuade it to (for example)adhere to particular service levels.
M
R 1 R 2 R 3 R 4 R 5
Externalities approach (Mathewson andWinter- discussed last year)
Retailers do not gain all of the benefits of anaction taken to improve sales; some goes tomanufacturer.
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Retailers when raising price confer benefitson neighbouring retailersEach retailer conveys a positive externality
on other retailers and on the manufacturerby engaging in promotion of the productsuch as advertising.
Vertical restraints, sometimes in combination,can in principle tackle all these problems.
5. Note that if power resides at the upper level(e.g. supermarkets) then some of the restraintscan operate the other way round. Mostcommonly discussed is shelf-space charges .Manufacturer is paid
A A A p q S Effectively, the manufacturer is paying part ofthe retailers fixed costs.
Another example is retrospective discounts,where manufacturer reduces price once acertain volume sold. Manufacturers alsocommonly are forced to participate in two for
one type offers.
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Policy:
Horizontal agreements generally amount to
some form of collusion and are thereforedisallowed.
These vertical agreements may well have theeffect of reducing prices/ providing a moresocially-optimal level of services and thereforeshould be treated quite differently.
Presumption that vertical agreements that donot contain horizontal elements should beallowed.
How can they contain horizontal elements?-discussed later.
EC326- Industrial Economics 2- 14 th Lecture
Vertical Control 2
Vertical restraints (introduction)Methods of control short of integration
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Table - Types of Vertical Restraints
Form ExamplesNon-linearPricing
Two-part tariff with a franchise fee plusa constant per-unit charge. Aggregatedrebate scheme with discounts for takingfull product range
QuantityForcing
A specified minimum quantity theretailer is required to distribute; e.g.beer sales in tenanted public houses
ServiceRequirements
A specified level of pre- and post-salesservice or promotional effort. Usingtrademarked equipment; e.g. fast-foodfranchises
Resale PriceMaintenance
Retail price fixed by the producer; e.g.the book market. A price floor or priceceiling
Refusal toSupply
Selective distribution limiting thenumber or distributors; e.g. finefragrances
ExclusiveDistribution
Distributors assigned exclusivity withina geographic area or over a particularclass of consumer or goods; e.g.newspaper distribution
ExclusiveDealing
The retailer is prohibited from stockingcompeting products; e.g. petrol retailing
Tie-in Sales Distributors contractually required totake other products, or even, with full-line forcing, an entire product range
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Back to simple numerical example
1. Maximum RPM
Upstream firm sets (1 ) / 2 B p c
Then set p A at some intermediate value betweenthat and c. (bargaining). The downstream firmimplements B and profit area is sharedbetween the players. Manufacturers often dothis by one means or another.
2. Quantity forcing
Set (1 ) / 2 Bq c
Then downstream firm implements this quantityand wholesale price level determines the split ofsurplus.
3. Franchise fee
Set a non-linear price for the good, along thelines: A A R F cq So input transferred at marginal cost andupstream firm makes its profit through the fixedcharge levied on B.
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4. Service requirements
In cases where these are important, they can beimposed so long as there is enough headroomin the max RPM price, or whatever.
These methods can also be used in a one tomany framework. Here, an exclusiveterritory will often be allocated in order to givean element of profit to the downstream firm thatcan be used to persuade it to (for example)adhere to particular service levels.
M
R 1 R 2 R 3 R 4 R 5
Externalities approach (Mathewson andWinter- discussed last year)
Retailers do not gain all of the benefits of anaction taken to improve sales; some goes tomanufacturer.
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Retailers when raising price confer benefitson neighbouring retailersEach retailer conveys a positive externality
on other retailers and on the manufacturerby engaging in promotion of the productsuch as advertising.
Vertical restraints, sometimes in combination,can in principle tackle all these problems.
5. Note that if power resides at the upper level(e.g. supermarkets) then some of the restraintscan operate the other way round. Mostcommonly discussed is shelf-space charges .Manufacturer is paid
A A A p q S Effectively, the manufacturer is paying part ofthe retailers fixed costs.
Another example is retrospective discounts,where manufacturer reduces price once acertain volume sold. Manufacturers alsocommonly are forced to participate in two for
one type offers.
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Policy:
Horizontal agreements generally amount to
some form of collusion and are thereforedisallowed.
These vertical agreements may well have theeffect of reducing prices/ providing a moresocially-optimal level of services and thereforeshould be treated quite differently.
Presumption that vertical agreements that donot contain horizontal elements should beallowed.
How can they contain horizontal elements?-discussed later.
Industrial Economics 2- 15th
LectureVertical Control 3
Vertical Restraints with competition effects
Intra and inter-brand competitionA two-to-many framework
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R 2 R 3 R 4 R 5 R 6R 1
M 1 M 2
Two to many
Exclusive purchasing agreement
R 1 R 2 R R 4 R 5
M 1 M 2
3
Exclusive dis tribution agreement
R 1 R 2 R 3 R 4 R 5
M 1 M 2
Inter and Intra brand competition- exclusivepurchasing reduces interbrand competition,exclusive distribution reduces intrabrand comp.
Territorial protection enhances latter effect.
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A two to many modelRey and Stiglitz (RAND 1995)
Notation: Upper case = Upstream values, lowercase = downstream.
Final demand : D i (p1 , p 2 ); complete symmetryassumed (e.g. D 12 = D
21)
Benchmark:
1. Direct producer competition: Max
Two-stage games:
1. No vertical arrangements- intra-brand pricecompetition leads to zero markups in the
second (retail) stage, so that P c
= pc
.
2. Exclusive contract:
Each retailer has monopolistic power over somefraction, say , of the final demand for each
11 1 1 2( ). ( , ) p c D p p
1
1( , )
c
c cc
p c p p p
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product. As a result, it can charge a markupover input price. This will lead to second-stageretail prices:
Where
At the first stage, price P 1 is chosen to maximise:
And similarly for 2. Thus:
Hence, after simplification and symmetry:
Here, and are the elasticities of a givenretailers price to its producers and the otherproducers wholesale prices. We may expectthat
11 1 1 1 2 2 1 2( ). ( ( , ), ( , ))
E E P c D p P P p P P
21 1 111 1 2
1 1
( ) . . 0 E E dpdp
D P c D DdP dP
1 1 2 2
( ) 1( , ). ( , ) ( , ). ( , )
E
E E E E E E E E E
P c p p p p p p p p P
1 2( , ) E i p P P
1 1
1 1
1 E E E
p P p
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3. Tenancy arrangement with fee transfer.
Now the manufacturer wants to set the optimalfinal price, so maximises:
Thus:
Therefore:
Therefore,
Double marginalisation raises price above pT .
1 21 0
11 1 1 1 2 2 1 2( ). ( ( , ), ( , )) p c D p P P p P P
1 1 11 1 21 1 2
1 1 1
( ) 0dp dp dp
D p c D DdP dP dP
21 2
1
1[ . ]
T
T p c
p
T E c p p p
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Slade on Beer in the UK
c p p p p p managed freetenanted leased chain
?
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Author of this section- Peter Lukacs. Thisis purely a personal view
What does the Office of Fair Trading (OFT)do?Making markets work well for consumers
Consumer protection
Market studies e.g. pharmacies, taxis, store cards
Mergers first stage review with reference to Competition Commission
Competition Act 1998 came in to force March 2000
OFT competition decisions can be appealed to Competition Appeals Tribunal andthence to court of appeal.
Competition Act 1998Chapter I (Article 81 EC Treaty)
Horizontal agreements e.g. cartels
Vertical agreements e.g. vertical restraints including resale price maintenance
OFT Chapter I cases include Hasbro/Argos/Littlewoods and Replica Football Kit
Chapter II (Article 82 EC Treaty)
Abuse of a dominant position
3 steps in approaching a potential case of abuse of a dominant position
Is the firm dominant?
1. Definition of the relevant market2. Assessment of the extent of market power including both the strength of existing
competition within the market and the presence of entry barriers
Being dominant is not an infringement. Abusing a dominant position is aninfringement.
Examples of abuses: excessive pricing; price discrimination; predatory pricing;margin squeeze; discounts; tying or bundling; and refusal to supply.
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Abuses can be exploitative or exclusionary primary but not exclusive focus is onexclusionary abuses
3. Assessment whether the firm actions are anti-competitive
Two potential tests
Is the firms action profitable but for the exclusionary effect?Would the firms action tend to eliminate, or deter entry by, equally efficientcompetitors?
NappNapp produce sustained release morphine, used to have a patent but that expired in1991. By 2000 still had very large market share >90%. Entry barrier is created by theswitching cost.
Two market segments - hospital and community
Elements of abuse excessively low prices in hospital segment, excessively highprices in community segment.
Very low prices, below direct cost, to the hospital segment.
Very high prices, significantly above cost, and above export price, supplied to thecommunity segment.
Profitable but for exclusionary effect? Hospital prescriptions lead to communityprescriptions therefore potentially on balance profitable across both segments, butnot if take hospital in isolation
Eliminate as efficient competitors? Switching costs ensured that an equally efficient
competitor would need to undercut Napp, so price matching sufficient to deter entry.
American AirlinesNot UK case. A US Department of Justice case. Legal framework is different in USfrom EC and UK.
American Airlines (AA) is the major airline at Dallas Fort Worth airport. AA runs a hubnetwork connecting flights around the country through Dallas.
Reaction to entry on one route by increasing capacity on that route and cutting fareson that route. Pricing above variable cost for the route as a whole. Court dismissed
case.
Department of Justice case based upon profit sacrifice in that the additional capacitywas not profitable. Price raised and capacity withdrawn after exit.
Profitable but for exclusionary effect? On the route the prices covered variable costs,the route wasnt necessarily contributing to fixed or common costs, there areadditional revenue benefits from interconnecting flights from the hub.
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Eliminate as efficient competitors? An equally efficient competitor on that route wouldnot be able to offer the interconnecting benefits that AA could or cover its fixed costsof operation, price matching causes exit and potentially deters entry.
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GenzymeGenzyme make a drug Cerezyme which is used to treat an enzyme deficiency calledGauchers disease. The drug costs approximately 100,000 per year, only 190patients in the UK the majority of which are given the drug in home.
Until 2001 Cerezyme distributed exclusively through a homecare service provider. In2001 Genzyme decided to end the exclusive contract and deliver the drug itselfeffectively creating a competitor to the existing homecare provider.
Genzyme provided the drug to homecare provider at the price it charged NHS for thedelivered drug including homecare.
Two potential abuses: bundling and margin squeeze.
Margin squeeze gives no margin to the homecare provider
Profitable but for exclusionary effect? Depends upon the relative efficiency ofGenzyme and its rival homecare service provider.
Eliminate as efficient competitors? An equally efficient competitor at the homecarelevel could make no money at all due to the margin squeeze, therefore yes.
CAT rejected bundling abuse due to lack of evidence of foreclosure but acceptedmargin squeeze.
BSkyBNon-infringement decision by OFT
BSkyB supplies channels e.g Sky Sports and Sky Box Office to other broadcasterssuch as cable operators and (then) ITV Digital and also supplies direct to consumersthrough satellite broadcasting.
Three potential abuses considered. Margin squeeze, bundling and discounts.
Margin squeeze: assessed whether downstream distribution company wasindependently profitable given wholesale prices of sky channels. Difficult to assessas the period coincided with rollout of conversion from analogue to digital. Discomade losses for a short period but quickly returned to profitability. Not enough toshow an infringement.
Bundling: Sky charges for packages and for premium channels according to a rate
card with a diminishing marginal price per premium channel. This may have theeffect of excluding rival premium channels but also potentially efficient form of pricediscrimination. Is incremental price less than incremental cost? Some evidence ofincremental prices below incremental cost for film channels but no evidence offoreclosure.
Further materials
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Abuse of Market Power, Speech by John Vickers Chairman of OFT atwww.oft.gov.uk
All OFT decisions are also on the OFT website, but note some are long!
Industrial Economics 2
Lecture 19- Vertical restraints case study
Beer
Historically, breweries sold beer through pubs
via a landlord-tenant relationship. Thisinvolved a beer tie.
In 1989, the MMC (forerunner to CC)investigated the market. Six brewers accountedfor 75% of beer and most pubs tied. Concernabout high prices and limited choice. MMC
proposed a number of radical changes to relaxthe vertical arrangements, seeing these as theroot of the problem.
These were subsequently modified as a result ofthe beer orders published in 1989 and to takeeffect by 1992. They required significant
divestiture from all 6 brewers. Tables show thepicture- a diversity of approaches was tried bythe brewers.
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Pubcos acquired significant estates, oftenkeeping tied leases (why did OFT allow this?).
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TABLE 1UK Beer Market by Channel of Trade
Per Cent Volume 1 2 3
Pre-MMC (1985?) Post-MMC 1994Tied (managed) 20 18 15Tied (tenanted) 26 21 9Tied (loan) 19 20 16Pub Co. (tied) 7Pub Co. (managed) 3Supply agreement - 9 *
Free 17 11 25
Take Home 18 21 25Total 100 100 100
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TABLE 2Operation of Retail Outlets
Owner
Number of
1988
Pubs
End 1992 Janua ry 1996
Allied 6678 4339 (tied) 4065
Bass 7190 4595 (tied) 4156
Courage 5002 0 (tied) 0S & N 2287 1850 2700
Greene King 766 851 900Mansfield 306 459 468
Marstons 853 890 885Frederic Robinson 378 378 (approx) 412
Thwaites 379 420 424
Vaux 577 769 700
Wolverhampton &Dudley
750 862 950
Grand Met 6419 1650 (managed, free after1991)
IEL 4350 (tied, reducing to 0 in1998)
4330 (IEL/Phoeni
Boddingtons 518 475 (taken over by Gbelow)
Pubmaster 466 2026 (including 734 leasedfrom Allied)
1750
Devenish 332 550 (to GW)
Greenall Whitley 1626 1500 2431
Free Trade 34000 approx. Unknown Unknown
:
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106
Logically, however, the benefits will notmaterialise if the typical tenant is forced into
unfavourable terms of business so as to beplaced at a competitive disadvantage. It is clearthat tenants pay more than free market pricesfor their beer, which does place them at adisadvantage. Free market outlets receive aprice discount of 20-25%.
However, tied tenants receive inducements as aresult of signing a tenancy agreement.
Thus the question turns on whether theinducements suffice to place the tenant on alevel playing field (176). The Commissionengages in a quantification of these benefits(such as subsidised rent, discounts on othergoods, and promotional assistance). Theyconcluded that on average the price differentialis more than compensated by quantifiablecountervailing benefits (186) ( I disagree).
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Crehan and the beer tie
May 2004- Court of Appeal awarded damages of
131,336 to Crehan, a publican, after 11 years oflitigation. This is the first time a UK courtawarded damages in a competition claim.
The beer tie agreement between Crehan andInntrepreneur (a pub chain) was held to breachArticle 81. The lease obliged Crehan to buyspecified beers from Courage at their listprice. Inntrepreneur was not covered by ablock exemption and had been refusedindividual exemption from Article 81. Therewere insufficient offsetting benefits for it toqualify.
Case may be appealed to House of Lords.
(NB The law has now changed, but still aproblem for pubcos).