microeconomics/industry analysis session #2: collusion
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Microeconomics/Industry Analysis
Session #2: Collusion
Prof. Amine Ouazad
LLM in International Business Law, March 28 2014
Outline for Session #2
1. Price & Quantity Wars: Strategic thinking
2. Sustaining Collusion
3. Deterring Collusion
Price warsInteractions between markets
Epson & HP 1989
Epson producing cheap inkjet printer
HP producing high-priced laser printers
Epson introduces cheap laser printer…
Put yourself in your competitor’s shoes: Chile’s shampoo war
1993: Unilever largest seller of shampoo (Sedal brand)
1993: Procter and Gamble introduces Pantene brandand capture market share equal to Sedal’s.
P&G cuts prices to capture Sedal’s market shares. Outcome??
Inkjet printer anyone?
Strategic thinking in daily life
The prisoners’ dilemma:
•Price wars
•Quantity wars
•Lance Armstrong?
•Nuclear Arms Race
•Bank runs
Solutions?
•OPEC
•Anti-doping regulations
•START Treaty
•Bank deposit insurance
➭Common issue?➭Outcome?
Why are Price Wars Dangerous?
Example 1:Electronic phonebooks• 1986: Nynex charged $10,000 per disk for NY directory• ProCD and Digital Directory Assistance• Chinese workers at $3.50 daily wage• Bertrand or Price Competition → Free
Example 2:Encyclopedia Britannica vs. Encarta1991: EB sold @ $1,6001992: Microsoft introduced Encarta, sold @ $49.951995: EB’s sales have halved1995: EB offers online subscription for $120 p.a. or CD for $2001996: EB lowers cost of subscription to $851999: EB offers FREE on-line service (www.britannica.com)Today: <$20 for DVD; $100 for online subscription
Outline for Session #2
1. Price & Quantity Wars: Strategic thinking
2. Sustaining Collusion
3. Deterring Collusion
A few players
• Archer Daniels Midland United States
• Ajinomoto Japan
• Sewon South Korea
• Kyowa Hakko Kogyo Japan
☞ January 1992: Face lowest prices in the history of lysine.
Price Wars: Putting Numbers
Dominant Strategy
Dom
inan
t S
trat
egy
ADM
Ajinomoto
High price
Low price
High price Low price
703.125
703.125
781.25
586
781.25
586
625
625
High prices lead to higher profits, but each firm has an incentive to deviate.
The Cartel’s Implicit Contract
• Agree on a higher price than the competitive price.
• Agree on a lower production than the competitive productive.
• Split the revenues among the cartel members.
• Why did they start the collusion in the Spring??
Setting up a cartel
• Participants in the cartel cannot enforce the terms of their implicit contract in a court of law.
• Hence, they set up a punishment mechanism for cartel members who deviate.
• Observe deviations from:
• Trade statistics.• Customers’ reports.• Creation of a lysine trade association.
Trigger Strategies to Enforce Collusive Outcome
Begin by cooperating. I assume equal split of the production in the collusive agreement.
Cooperate as long as the rivals do.
Upon observing a defection: immediately revert to a period of punishment of specified length in which everyone plays non-cooperatively
• Example
• Grim Trigger Strategy (GTS)
• Start off setting production at the low production leveland continue to do so until the other firm cheats by producing more.
• If the other firm cheats, set high output per year forever.
Payoff Stream from Grim Trigger Strategy
$781.25M
$703.125M
$625M
t t+1 t+2 t+3
collude
cheat
Time
Profit
PV (collude) =
PV (cheat) =
“Monthly scorecards were prepared and discussed at quarterly meetings, based on reported sales volumes of each firm. To verify reported sales volumes, international trade statistics were available.”
Collusion: Weighing Costs and Benefits
• For punishment mechanism to work:
• Gains from cooperation must exceed net gain from cheating and being punished
• That is:
• You would collude if PV of colluding > PV of cheating 703.125+703.125/r > 781.25+625/r → r < 1 (100%)• This condition always holds.
• Key take-away point: If detection is certain and punishment is quick…
• “Grim Trigger Strategy” can effectively deter cheating and ensure collusion
• AND: Conditions on the Lysine market (e.g. only a few major players, frequent meetings, international trade statistics) were very conducive to trigger strategies working!
• The Grim Trigger Strategy is unforgiving.
• Tit-for-Tat Strategy
• Start off by cooperating (its nice!)
• Cooperate if your rival cooperated in the previous period
• Cheat for X periods if your rival cheated in the previous period
• Back to collusion after X periods.
• Tit for tat cooperates with cooperative opponents; punishes uncooperative opponents.
• It is forgiving & easy to understand.
How long do you need to punish your partner to make him or her cooperate all the time??
Very impatient partner ??
Cheating or not Cheating?How many punishment periods?
Ajinomoto CEO: “cheating was frequent but the range of cheating was not too big ... they kept their promise about 90 percent. Something like that.”
Outline for Session #2
1. Price & Quantity Wars: Strategic thinking
2. Sustaining Collusion
3. Deterring Collusion
How Did This All End?
• Collusion between ADM and Ajinomoto.
• Mark Whitacre (Matt Damon) is the Informant.
• FBI raid at ADM’s offices.
Price declines to the competitive price.
• December :ADM & Ajinomoto executives indicted.
• ADM Fined $100M. Additional legal costs of $640M.
Extra Profit of collusion ?? 78.125+78.125/0.05 > $1b if done forever !!
1995
1996
1992
U.S. Attorney GeneralJanet Reno:"This $100 million criminal fine should send a message to the entire world.”
Really??
Lost consumer surplus?
Incentives to collude?
U.S. Attorney GeneralJanet Reno:"This $100 million criminal fine should send a message to the entire world.”
Really??
Lost consumer surplus?
Incentives to collude?
“The indictment and information further charge that the defendants and co-conspirators:
•Agreed to charge lysine prices at agreed-upon levels and to increase those prices accordingly.
•Agreed to allocate among the corporate conspirators the volume of lysine to be sold by each.
•Issued price announcements and price quotations in accordance with the agreements.
•Participated in meetings and conversations for the purpose of monitoring and enforcing adherence to the agreed upon prices and sales volumes.”
Fines[…] “The defendants are charged with violating Section 1 of the Sherman Act, which carries a maximum fine of $10 million for corporations and a maximum penalty of three years imprisonment and a $350,000 fine for individuals.
The fines for both corporations and individuals may be increased to twice the gain derived from the crime by the defendant or twice the loss suffered by the victims of the crime, if either of those amounts is greater than the statutory maximum fine of $10 million for corporations and $350,000 for individuals.”
Pm=$1.25
Qm
=1875
P*=$1
Q*
=2500
Collusion Profits & Cost for Consumers
P ($/lb)
Q (lbs)
Market Demand
Profit with competition
Total Cartel Profits
Lost consumer surplus?Cartel profits?
Supply
Recent Cartels
• ADM was involved in two other cartels: the citric acid cartel & the high-fructose corn syrup cartel.
• Vitamin conspiracy.
• Current investigations:
• SIM card providers in Europe.• Elevators & Escalators in Europe: Schindler Holding.• Construction companies in South Africa.
US/EU Leniency policy?
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