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PANEL II

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Title: PANEL II


1
PANEL II
  • Criteria Used to Assess The Durability of Market
    Power

2
Durability of Dominance and Identifying Entry
Barriers and Competitive Effects in Practice
Presented through a not-so-scenic tour of
Jersey, Channel Islands
  • ICN Unilateral Conduct Workshop, Panel II,
    Washington DCMarch 23, 2009

3
-Assume the presence of a dominant firm making
monopoly profits
Classic Economic Theory Entry restores
effective competition
Key QuestionWill it happen in practice?
4
The Costs of Entry (I)
Establishment
Access to Labor/Expertise
Facilities
  • Capital Investments
  • Sunk Costs?

Access to Capital
5
The Costs of Entry (II)
  • Potential bottlenecks
  • Supply Chain
  • Access to Markets

6
Legal Considerations
Potentially, Sector Regulation
National Laws
7
Incumbents
  • Network Effects?
  • Legacy of State ownership?
  • Vertical Integration?
  • Reputation of incumbents?

8
Customers/Consumers
  • Barriers to Switching?
  • Search Costs?
  • Preferences?

9
Ultimately Will New Competition Restore a
Competitive Market?
?
For the Potential New Entrant Is there a
profitable business case?
For the Competition Law Enforcement Agency Entry
timely, likely, sufficient? Other market factors
relevant? Is dominance entrenched?
10
Panel II Speakers
  • Dr. Simon Roberts
  • Chief Economist and Manager, Policy and Research
    Division, Competition Commission South Africa
  • Jacques Steenbergen
  • Director General, Belgian Competition Authority
  • Ronald A. Stern
  • Vice President Senior Competition Counsel,
    General Electric Company
  • Charles Webb
  • Executive Director, Jersey Competition Regulatory
    Authority

11
Durability of dominanceJacques
Steenbergendirector general
  • ICN Unilateral conduct workshop Panel II
  • Washington DC, March 23, 2009

Belgian Competition Authority Directorate General
12
Durability of dominance an ambiguous issue
  • Durability is a specific concern in case it
    increases the risk of abuse
  • Exclusionary practices
  • Exploitative abuses
  • Discrimination
  • Durability is also a specific concern when it is
    the result and/or evidence of abusive practices
    that aimed at the strengthening of a dominant
    position
  • Durability of dominance makes abuses more serious
    and exclusionary abuses are in turn likely to
    enhance durability it is an element of
    assessment/evidence

Belgian Competition Authority Directorate General
13
Durability of dominance an ambiguous issue (2)
  • But durability is as such not a constitutive
    element of an infringement of the rules of
    competition, just as dominance does as such not
    constitute an infringement
  • Because of an ambiguous attitude to dominance, we
    inevitably also have an ambiguous attitude to its
    durability
  • And we can not exclude that durability mainly
    points to consistent competitive success
  • It must be assessed in the context of the
    assessment of dominance and abuse

Belgian Competition Authority Directorate General
14
Assessment of durability
  • Assessment of dominance see best practices
  • Assessment of durability mainly assessment of
    barriers to entry (see presentation of Chuck
    Webb)
  • Assessment of the causes of durability only
    relevant to the extent that
  • Durability is a specific concern
  • The causes need to be addressed as such
    regardless of the specificities of the unilateral
    conduct case evaluation of the regulatory
    environment and state action

Belgian Competition Authority Directorate General
15
Durability of dominance and liberalization the
case of incumbents
  • The (former) monopolists can only lose market
    share are they (still) dominant?
  • Sunk costs and written-of investments
  • The technology timeline
  • Price squeezes caught between consumer welfare
    and competitor protection?
  • The unilateral conduct equivalent of sticky
    pricing?
  • (See further the presentation of Simon Roberts)

Belgian Competition Authority Directorate General
16
ICN Unilateral Conduct Workshop
  • Assessing Whether A Firm is Dominant The Role
    of Other Market Criteria

Ronald A. Stern Vice President Senior
Competition Counsel General Electric
Company March 23, 2009
17
ICN Workshop Other Market Criteria
Engines for Large Regional Jets (70-90
Passengers)
GE Honeywell Rolls Royce Pratt Whitney
1. Overall Installed Base 40-50 40-50 0-10 0
2. Installed Base of Aircraft in Production 60-70 30-40 0 0
3. Order Backlog on Aircraft Not Yet in Service 90-100 0-10 0 0
Prior to the transaction, GE was
already dominant in this market.
18
ICN Workshop Other Market Criteria
  • How Does the Relevant Market Operate?
  • Powerful Buyer Aircraft manufacturer
  • Winner-take-all Bidding 1 engine selected
  • Pricing Locked-In by contract for the life of
    the aircraft program

Key Issue Were there credible bidders when the
engine supplier was selected?
19
ICN Workshop Other Market Criteria
20
ICN Workshop Other Market Criteria
  • Existence of Credible Bidders
  • Multiple engine firms competed for large regional
    jet opportunities GE or CFM RR SPW or PW
  • RR and PW each had a track record of success in
    commercial aircraft engines generally and in
    adjacent markets (small regional jets 100-120
    seat large commercial aircraft)
  • SPW JV won one of the large regional jet engine
    competitions

Dominance/substantial market power unlikely
despite extremely large market share
21
ICN Workshop Other Market Criteria
  • What Has Happened Since 2001?
  • PW continued to invest in innovative geared fan
    technology
  • Snecma continued to pursue regional jet engine
    opportunities separate from PW
  • Three new large regional jet programs launched
  • China Regional Jet (ARJ121) GE engine
  • Russian Regional Jet (SSJ100) Snecma/Saturn JV
    engine
  • Mitsubishi Regional Jet (MRJ) PW geared fan
    engine

22
ICN Workshop Other Market Criteria
  • Growing Market Share Approaching 100 May
  • Not Equal Dominance/Substantial Market Power
  • Examine how the relevant market works
  • Assess other factors such as (1) powerful
    buyers, (2) bidding/winner-take-all contracts,
    (3) rivals success in adjacent markets, and (4)
    ongoing innovation by rivals
  • Focus on whether there is evidence of a high
    decree of sustained pricing power the RPs
    definition of Dominance/Substantial Market Power

23
Dominance, durability and state-created
monopolies
  • ICN Unilateral Conduct Workshop
  • Simon Roberts

23
24
Introduction
  • Durability of dominance is important in dominance
    assessment, and we are concerned with whether a
    firms dominant position is entrenched, and why
  • Dangers of over-enforcement and chilling effects?
    - matters greatly how dominance was established
  • A firms dominant position may be entrenched
    because of previous/ongoing state support, even
    though firms inefficiency and/or exercise of
    market power may mean there are some fringe
    competitors
  • Dominant firm may have the power, incentive to
    engage in anti-competitive conduct to undermine
    effective competitive rivalry
  • In many countries this is a big issue for
    competition authorities, compounded by relatively
    small markets, scale and scope effects, access to
    upstream markets/vertical integration etc.

24
25
What should we be considering in state-created
monopoly?
  • Ownership
  • But state support is much wider
  • Subsidies, finance
  • Rights to infrastructure, inputs etc
  • Past regulatory provisions, licencing (such as
    marketing boards and legal cartels, where there
    may have been regional allocations)
  • Not-regulated today (i.e. not talking here of
    regulated natural monopolies)
  • and
  • Where the advantage bestowed is not transitory
  • Relates to other considerations such as entry
    barriers, economies of scale/scope etc

25
26
Illustrative Examples
  • 1. Grain Silos
  • Owned by former cooperatives which had received
    high levels of state support and subsidies, now
    private companies, providing wide-range of
    services and also engaged in trading of grain
  • Large investments required to build silos
    (although alternatives being used silo bags)
  • High local transport costs for grain
  • Silo firms had set conditions linking farmers
    storage of grain to their own trading operations
  • 2. Airlines (domestic flights)
  • National carrier still state-owned with
    government capital injections, after failed
    privatisation, facing rivalry in local market in
    full service and low cost airlines
  • Inducements to travel agents relating to
    sales/quotes of its flights over rivals
  • Dominance? - Low cost and full service time
    sensitive travel (corporate market)?

26
27
Examples cont.
  • 3. Industrial chemicals fertilizer manufacture
  • Countrys major chemicals company state-owned
    until 1990
  • Continued to receive state support (incentives,
    infrastructure) advantageous access to inputs
    (natural gas pipeline supply)
  • Pricing main fertilizer chemicals against an
    imported alternative fertilizer alleged
    exclusionary actions against downstream
    blenders/distributors/importers
  • 4. Beer
  • Incumbent brewer with c95 of market
  • Not state-owned but historically very close links
    with state
  • Entry barriers may appear low (scale economies
    etc), but issues of branding, distribution etc
  • Various alleged exclusionary/restrictive
    conditions on distribution and retail outlets

27
28
Implications?
  • Avoid over enforcement / false positives
    wrongly finding abusive conduct
  • this depends on the hurdle of dominance and on
    the criteria for finding abuse
  • Under enforcement is much more likely in
    countries with small markets, given scale
    economies etc
  • higher levels of state support in the past and
    present further reinforces this
  • State support is one factor in comprehensive
    consideration of factors affecting competitive
    conditions in the market under investigation
  • Defining dominance is first step in effective
    enforcement against anti-competitive conduct by
    firms with entrenched dominance, especially
    state-created monopolies

28
29
PANEL II
  • Criteria Used to Assess The Durability of Market
    Power

30
BREAK
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