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3. Cartels and Collusion

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Title: 3. Cartels and Collusion


1
3. Cartels and Collusion
  • Competition ? less than jointly max profit ?
    firms have incentives to avoid competition
  • These incentives are basis for competition policy
  • Explicit cartels, implicit tacit collusion
  • How would these show up in reaction fn picture?
  • Detect Cartels and Collusion?
  • Hard to do w/ econ alone
  • Lerner Index L (p - ci)/p si/e?
  • If p, si and e known, make inference on p - ci
  • Often not practical p, ci and e not known
    accurately enough
  • But with good enough data this can be done
  • Identical prices?
  • Not evidence for cartel
  • Perfect competition ? identical prices

2
3.1 Explicit Cartel
  • Intuition
  • Few competitors ? easy to form cartel/collude
  • Many competitors ? hard to form cartel/collude
  • Selten (1973) 4 is few, 6 is many
  • Intuition w/ 6 competitors staying outside
    cartel gives more than joining cartel w/ 5 other
    firms
  • Result from 2-stage model
  • 1. Decide to join/stay out
  • 2. Choose output
  • If n gt 5, best strategy in stage 1 is to stay out
  • If n lt 5, best strategy in stage 1 is join cartel

3
3.2 Tacit Collusion
  • Implicit agreement or understanding not to
    compete
  • Eg. firms "agree" on monopoly price and output
  • Unstable cheating and undercutting gives even
    higher profits than collusion, if rivals adher to
    agreement
  • Need mechanism to remove incentives for cheating
  • "Stick-and-Carrot" Theory
  • Cheating draws punishment and low profits in
    future
  • Collusion draws rewards (high profits)
  • Deters from cheating on promise to fix prices
  • Future reward ? Collude now
  • Requires that future matter

4
3. Cartels and Collusion
  • How to punish?
  • Price war
  • Punishment will also hurt the punisher
  • Need incentives to punish
  • Collusion in Bertrand Competition
  • Read Motta Ch 4
  • Model firms interact repeatedly
  • Assume c 0, mkt demand q a - bp
  • Per period profits now ?it pit qit(pit, pjt)
  • Bertrand equil price for one-shot game 0
  • Each period t each firm chooses price pit knowing
    all previous prices pit-s, s 1,2,3,
  • No end-game problem repeat per-period game
    infinitely many times
  • Or Prob(next period is last) lt 1

5
3. Cartels and Collusion
  • Future matters but less than today firms
    discount future profits with discount factor 0 lt
    ? lt 1
  • Owners of firms value mt1 ?mt
  • where r is discount (or interest) rate, P
    probability that game ends after this period and
    k firm's marginal cost of capital
  • Firm goal max present value of per-period profit
    streamVi ?t ?t?it
  • Strategy?
  • Plan ahead how to play entire game
  • What per-period moves to choose after any history
  • Think players desing strategy before game starts
    and then leave computers to execute strategy

6
3. Cartels and Collusion
  • Examples of simple strategies
  • One-shot Bertand price always
  • Tit-for-Tat do today what rival did yesterday
  • pi1 pM pit pM if pjt-1 pM, else pit 0
  • Equilibrium No incentive to change strategy
  • Is "always one-shot Bertrand equil behavior"
    still an equil strategy?
  • Yes if i always chooses pit 0, best j can do
    is to choose pjt 0 ? ?it 0
  • Both always charge monopoly price and earn ?it
    ?iM/2 gt 0 equilibrium?
  • If j always charges pjt pM, what should i do?
  • Look at rf i should choose pit pM- ?
  • If i deviates from pM, it earns higher profits
    every period ?iD pM- ? gt pM/2 (D deviate or
    defect), henceViD ?t ?t ?it(piD,pjM) gt ViM
    ?t ?t ?it(piM,pjM)

7
3. Cartels and Collusion
  • ? Strategy always monopoly price is not in
    equilibrium
  • Grim Strategy (GS)
  • Choose pi1 pM
  • Choose pit pM if pjt-1 pM
  • Else always choose pit 0
  • Suppose j knows i plays GS what is best for j?
  • GS is best reply (among others)
  • ? GS is a best reply against itself
  • ? Both firms using GS is an equilibrium
  • Punishment needs to be credible, otherwise it is
    only empty threat
  • There must be incentives to start punishment
  • Punishment must be part of equilibrium path from
    that moment onward, so that no firm will want to
    deviate from punishment
  • One-shot Nash equil behavior always credible
    punishment

8
3. Cartels and Collusion
  • GS punishes defection forever
  • Punishment "too hard", lesser punishment suffices
  • Optimal punishment shortest number of periods T
    such that extra profits gained by defection are
    vanished
  • Stay on intended equil path earn ?M/2 each
    period
  • Temptation gain ?M - ?M/2 - ? ?M/2 - ? during
    defection
  • Punishment earn zero profits long enough so that
    profits (defect punishment) lt profits
    (collusion)
  • Minimum length of sufficient punishment depends
    on discount factor ?
  • Often optimal punishment is minimax strategy of
    per period game, ie tougher than one-shot equil
    behavior
  • GS easy to use
  • Point here collusive outcome, not details how one
    supports outcome

9
3. Cartels and Collusion
  • "Folk Therorem" Any outcome that leaves each
    player more than one-shot minmax is sustainable
    as an equil outcome in infinitely repeated game
  • There are many equilibrium strategies
  • "Anything" is in equil
  • No predictive power w/o more assumptions
  • Generally collusion is sustainable if temptation
    to defect is low enough and punisment following
    the deviation strong enough
  • Firm wants to keep colluding if present value of
    devi-ating is smaller than present value of
    adhering to collusive agreement
  • PV of collusion hereViC ?t?t?it(piC,pjC)
    piC/(1-?)as ?t dt 1/(1-d) if d lt 1

10
3. Cartels and Collusion
  • PV of deviation profits reaped during deviation
    present value of profits earned during
    punishmentViD ?D ?t?t?it(piP,pjP) ?D ?
    piP/(1-?)
  • Note here punishment assumed to be infinitely
    long
  • Collusion is sustainable if
  • Incentive to deviate depends on discount factor
  • If discount factor is too low to support
    collusion, either toughen up punishment or try to
    lower degree of collusion
  • Longer or harder price war
  • Reduce collusive prices from monopoly price
  • Note punisments are never observed
  • None used since threat is enough

11
3. Cartels and Collusion
  • Homework
  • Assume duopoly, c0, mkt demand q 100 - p, and
    price must be integer (100, 99, 98, ...)
  • Assume punishment pt 0 ( c)
  • What is optimal punishment strategy for
  • ? 0.5
  • ? 1
  • Need to find i) monopoly price and profits and
    ii) optimal one-period defection for i if j
    charges monopoly price
  • Then calculate how long price war needed to make
    defection unprofitable

12
3. Cartels and Collusion
  • Collusion with Imperfect Information
  • What if firms cannot observe rivals' exact prices
    nor quantities sold?
  • ? Don't know if rival defected ? don't know when
    to start price war
  • No threat of price war ? collusion not
    sustainable?
  • Use other info Sales were less than expected
  • Think Bertrand oligopoly with identical goods and
    with stochastic demand
  • Firm has 0 demand today somebody deviated and
    stole customers or shift in demand?
  • Start price war when price or demand drops
    "enough"
  • Start price war even if you know nobody deviated,
    as nobody has incentives to deviate
  • Intuition no punishment ? no firm has incentives
    to collude ? per period equil only possibility

13
3. Cartels and Collusion
  • Factors that Help Collusion
  • General idea stronger, earlier and more certain
    punishment increases possibilities to collusion
  • Topsy-Turvy principle the more firms have
    opportunities for aggressive competition, the
    less competition there is
  • Public prices and other market transparency
  • Easy to observe deviation
  • Size of cartel
  • N equally sized firms
  • Each firm receives 1/Nth share of total monopoly
    profits
  • Collusion sustainable if one shot defection
    followed by punishment leaves less profits that
    staying on collusive path

14
3. Cartels and Collusion
  • Product differentation works two ways
  • More products are differentiated, the larger
    price decrease needed to
  • steal mkt share
  • punish deviator
  • More products are differentiated, less incentive
    to cheat and try to steal mkt share
  • More products are differentiated, less price war
    by rivals affects profits
  • Introduces non-price competition more variables
    to monitor and more ways to cheat
  • Cost conditions and capacity utilization
  • Capacity constraint or steeply rising MC reduce
    profit margin for extra output
  • Reduce incentive to cheat
  • Reduces possibilities and incentives to punish

15
3. Cartels and Collusion
  • Free capacity
  • Increases temptation to cheat
  • Allows harsher punishment ? increases
    possibilities and incentives to punish
  • Elasticity of firm demand
  • Inelastic firm demand ? more mkt share means
    significant reduction in price ? less incentive
    to cheat
  • More elastic demand is, the harder it is to
    sustain collusion
  • Multimarket contact
  • Firms produce several competing goods or operate
    on several geographic mkts
  • More opportunities to cheat
  • Price war on all mkts ? allows more severe
    punishments

16
3. Cartels and Collusion
  • Firm symmetry
  • Firms have different shares of a specific asset
    (capital) which affects marginal costs
  • Joint profit maximization output is shifted away
    from small (inefficient) firms towards large
    (efficient) firms
  • Smallest firm has highest potential to steal
    business of its rivals and, has highest
    incentives to disrupt collusive agreement
  • Incentives to deviate are reversed when
    equilibrium calls for punishments
  • Largest firm loses most at punishment phase, it
    will have highest incentives to deviate from
    punishment
  • Capacity constraints
  • Incentives to stay in collusive equilibrium are
    very different for large and small firms
  • Small firm will have some incentive to cheat in
    short run, as it can only increase its sales
    marginally up to capacity level

17
3. Cartels and Collusion
  • Large firm has a lot more capacity available and
    can gain more customers with same price deviation
    from collusive norm
  • Large firms tend to have a greater incentive to
    deviate from collusive price
  • Asymmetry in capacities will also have an
    important effect on effective punishments
  • Worst punishment firm can impose on its
    competitors is to produce up to full capacity
  • Small firm that is already producing at almost
    full capacity has low possibilities to punish
    rivals that do not follow collusive norm
  • Large firm competing with small firm will have
    large incentives to deviate from any collusive
    norm without this being disciplined threat of low
    prices in future
  • Increases in asymmetries in capacities make
    collusion more difficult

18
3. Cartels and Collusion
  • Collusion and Antitrust
  • See Motta Ch 4, Europe Economics report,
    UPM/Haindl and Gencor/Lonrho decisions, and
    browse my forest paper
  • Joint dominance and coordinated effects in legal
    jargon collusion in econ jargon
  • Core of policy problem Collusion arises as
    equilibrium behavior
  • Hard to prohibit or deal with ex post
  • Solution try to prevent collusion, ban business
    practices and mergers that help to facilitate
    collusion see above
  • Analyses of asymmetry in assets and capacity
    constraints suggest merger guidelines that differ
    from traditional wisdom
  • For a given number of firms, Herfindahl and other
    concentration tests predict that more symmetric
    industry is more competitive

19
3. Cartels and Collusion
  • Asymmetry may be pro-competitive
  • Asymmetric industry may even more than compensate
    for reduction in number of firms in merger
    involving large firm
  • Increased asymmetry hurts collusion and may
    benefit competition
  • How to identify collusion?
  • Possible to detect collusion from behavior alone?
  • Firms have more mkt power than one shot equil?
  • Estimate cost, demands and reaction fns and
    compare actual behavior to non-cooperative and
    collusive equil
  • Doable, but gets technical with differentiated
    products (see Nevo, Slade)

20
3. Cartels and Collusion
  • Detecting Collusion
  • Inferences about competition from price and
    quantity data rest on assumptions on 1) demand,
    2) costs, and 3) nature of firms unobservable
    strategic interactions see Market Power above
  • Demand specification plays critical role in
    competition models
  • Demand position, shape and sensitivity to
    competitors actions affects firms ability to
    price above cost
  • In oligopoly, supply behavior equation is
    aggregate first-order condition for
    profit-maximization, not aggregate MC curve
  • Mark-up supply MC depends on firms
    competitive interactions
  • Data can be consistent both with collusion and
    competition, depending on demand and cost
    specification
  • Wrong model for demand and/or cost?

21
3. Cartels and Collusion
  • Example
  • Constant elasticity industry demand curve at each
    period t
  • 1 ln Qt a e ln Pt b Zt ut,
  • where e is demand elasticity, Zt vector of
    demand shifters and ut error term
  • Constant elasticity variable cost function
  • Ci(qit) ci qdit
  • FOC for maximizing per period profits by choosing
    qit
  • 2 pt(1 e/?it) ci qdit
  • where ?it is CV parameter (?Qt/?qit) (qit/Qt)
  • Recall, for cartel ?it 1, ?it 1/N for
    symmetric Cournot
  • Observing ?it close to one or much above 1/N
    indication for collusion
  • We only observe (Qt,Pt) pairs that solve true
    1 and 2, not functions themselves, so
    assumptions on functions and stochastics (ut)
    matter
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