Cartels and tacit collusion Flashcards

1
Q

What does it mean if a firm were to collude or price fix?

A

The firms avoid competing with one another

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2
Q

Why is collusion said to be tacit?

A

Because firms non-cooperatively adopt strategies that lead to a coordinated outcome

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3
Q

True or False:

There is a consensus that collusive agreements are welfare-reducing and should therefore be forbidden

A

True

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4
Q

What are the two important aspects of collusion discussed in this chapter?

A

Cartel formation and the stability of such cartels, including their optimal and equilibrium size.

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5
Q

How can collusion be sustained without binding agreements?

A

Collusion can be sustained as the non-cooperative equilibrium of repeated competition, leading to a tacit understanding among firms on how to behave in a coordinated way without explicit agreements.

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6
Q

Why is tacit collusion of particular importance for firms?

A

Tacit collusion is important because while explicit cartels are illegal, firms can still implicitly coordinate, understanding how other firms will react to their behavior without binding agreements

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7
Q

What is the main issue with tacit collusion?

A

Determining the sustainability of tacitly agreed-upon prices within a non-cooperative equilibrium when competition is repeated over time.

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8
Q

What lesson does the vitamin cartel case provide about the potential risks and consequences of corporate collusion?

A

It demonstrates that while cartels may offer short-term profits for companies, the long-term risks and consequences including fines, legal costs, reputational damage, and potential imprisonment for executives, are severe.

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9
Q

What effect does the formation of a cartel have on competition within an industry?

A

They eliminate the competition between them, leading to reduced joint output or increased prices.

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10
Q

Why might cartels be considered unstable?

A

because firms outside the cartel might benefit from the collusive behaviour, leading them to free-ride on the efforts of the cartel, and the stability of a cartel depends on the institutional procedures that govern its formation.

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11
Q

What are the three procedures contrasted in the study of cartels?

A

1) Firms deciding simultaneously to participate in a single industry-wide cartel with open membership

2) The endogenous formation of multiple cartels with exclusive membership

3) bilateral market-sharing agreements that create a collusive network.

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12
Q

How does the first procedure of cartel formation differ from the second?

A

In the first procedure, cartel membership is open and firms cannot exclude others from joining. In the second, cartels form sequentially with exclusive membership, and each firm’s decision influences subsequent actions.

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13
Q

What characterises the third procedure of cartel formation?

A

The third procedure relies on bilateral market-sharing agreements, where pairs of firms refrain from competing in each other’s territories, thus forming a collusive network.

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14
Q

What market structure is used to compare the three cartel formation procedures?

A

The comparison is made in a market structure where symmetric firms produce a homogeneous good at a constant marginal cost, competing à la Cournot with an inverse demand function P=a−q, where q is the total quantity produced.

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15
Q

Tacit collusion analysis is highly relevant for explicit agreements, true or false?

A

True

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16
Q

Under simultaneous cartel formation, do firms have an incentive to leave the cartel?

A

Yes, due to the free riding effect

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17
Q

When firms produce horizontally differentiated goods, is the free riding effect larger or smaller than if they were to produce homogeneous goods

A

Smaller, as competition is relaxed

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18
Q

True or false:

If goods are sufficiently differentiated, it is possible to find stable cartels comprising not all firms but a strict subset of them

A

True

19
Q

What is the ‘80% rule’ in the context of cartel formation?

A

The ‘80% rule’ states that in the equilibrium of the sequential cartel formation game, at most one cartel will form, comprising more than 80% of the firms in the industry, while the rest remain independent.

20
Q

What does sequential cartel formation allow for in terms of cartel structure?

A

Sequential cartel formation allows for the endogenous formation of multiple cartels with exclusive membership, where firms take a forward-looking approach in deciding whether to join a cartel.

21
Q

How does product differentiation affect the formation and stability of a cartel?

A

Product differentiation relaxes competition and thus reduces the free-riding incentive, making it more feasible for cartels to form and remain stable.

22
Q

What is the main result from the section on single cartel formation on a Cournot market with homogeneous goods?

A

The main result is that in a Cournot market with homogeneous goods and constant marginal costs, no cartel is stable unless there are only two firms, due to the strong free-riding incentive.

23
Q

Why can the formation of a cartel be seen as a public good?

A

The formation of a cartel can be seen as a public good because it eliminates competition between firms, leading them to reduce their joint output or to increase their prices, which benefits all firms even those outside the cartel due to the higher market price.

24
Q

How is a horizontal merger related to cartel formation?

A

A horizontal merger can be seen as a cartel requiring the unanimity of its members, as both involve firms coordinating to act as a single entity in the market.

25
Q

True or false:

In a simultaneous cartel formation, any firm has incentive to leave the cartel

A

True!

26
Q

True or false:

In a sequential formation, the first firm can commit to stay out the cartel, making it possible for a cartel to form at equilibrium

A

True

27
Q

What is a strategy defined as?

A

A list of actions (a contingent plan) that tells the firm what to choose in each period as a function of past prices or quantities (that is, the history of the game)

28
Q

True or false:

Anything said about tacit collusion is relevant for explicit collusion

A

True

29
Q

What happens initially under the Grim Trigger Strategy?

A

The first firm chooses the action that maximises total profits (price at monopoly level)

30
Q

What is the trade-off between in the Grim Trigger Strategy?

A

The immediate gain from deviation and future losses resulting from the other firms punishment

31
Q

What does the Grim Trigger Strategy trade-off depend on?

A

The magnitude of the deviation and the punishment profits wrt collusive profits and the firms discount factor

32
Q

What is a crucial element to support collusion?

A

The discount factor because the grim trigger strategy relies on firms valuing future profits highly enough to deter them from seeking an immediate gain from cheating on the cartel agreement.

33
Q

Under the grim trigger strategy, if any one firm deviates from this agreement (by, say, undercutting the agreed-upon price), what happens to all other firms?

A

They will revert to non-cooperative behaviour indefinitely

34
Q

What does the discount factor represent?

A

The present value of future earnings

35
Q

.If firms discount future profits heavily (implying they place a higher value on immediate profits), the threat of future punishment is less effective, and the grim trigger strategy may not support collusion

A

True

36
Q

True or False:

Tacit collusion is not possible when competition is repeated over a finite number of periods

A

True

37
Q

What does it mean if collusion is reached in a ‘Tacit’ way?

A

Firms do not necessarily resort, for example to explicit quota agreements to discipline collusion

38
Q

What do we mean if firms are competing with an infinite horizon?

A

There is no end date to the game, after each period there is a probability that firms will compete one more time

39
Q

what does the discount factor lie strictly between?

A

0 and 1, if players are patient then discount factor will be closer to 1

40
Q

When is it possible to support collusion under the grim trigger strategy?

A

Depends on whether the payoff from cooperation is no smaller than the payoff from deviating

41
Q

Is collusion harder or easier to maintain across multimarket industries? Why?

A

Easier because the frequent interactions between the same firms in multiple markets create a mutual dependency. This interdependence enhances the ability to monitor and enforce collusive agreements, as firms can retaliate across different markets if one party deviates, thereby increasing the overall cost of defection and stabilizing the collusion.

42
Q

Why is collusive pricing difficult to maintain in one-period competitions but easier in multi-period interactions?

A

Collusive pricing is challenging in one-period competitions because there’s no future interaction to consider, encouraging firms to maximize immediate profits without fear of retaliation, while in multi-period interactions, the ongoing nature of competition discourages deviations from collusive agreements due to the threat of future retaliation and the potential for sustained higher profits, promoting stable and cooperative pricing strategies over time.

43
Q
A