Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-gb8f7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T22:19:03.920Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Antitrust policy and price collusion : public agencies vs delegation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 August 2016

Gianmaria Martini
Affiliation:
Department of Management and Information Technology, University of Bergamo, Italy
Cinzia Rovesti
Affiliation:
Autorità Garante della Concorrenza e del Mercato, Roma, Italy
Get access

Summary

This paper investigates the effectiveness of antitrust policy in fighting horizontal collusion under different regimes of policy implementation. We consider two regimes: a public agency regime, where an antitrust authority is in charge of competition policy, and a “delegation” regime, where the policy is chosen by consumers. In both regimes the policy is implemented under discretion. The analysis shows that delegation dominates, both in case of complete and imperfect information about production costs, the public agency regime because consumers credibly start off an higher level of investigation activity than the public agency. This result implies that the public agency will fight the cases involving “relevant” anti-competitive activities, while consumers will act also against “minor” violations. The combination of the two regimes yields an higher welfare than having only a public agency in charge of competition policy, because consumers can partially relax the agency's limited resources constraint.

Résumé

Résumé

Cet article étudie l'efficacité d'une politique antitrust combattant la collusion horizontale sous différents régimes de mise en oeuvre. Nous considérons deux régimes : un régime avec agence publique, où une authorité antitrust se charge de la politique de concurrence, et un régime de « délégation », où la politique est choisie par les consommateurs. Sous les deux régimes, la politique est mise en oeuvre à discrétion. L'analyse montre que la délégation domine l'agence publique, dans le cas d'une information complète comme imparfaite sur les coûts de production, parce que les consommateurs mettent en place une activité d'investigation d'un plus haut niveau. Ce résultat implique que l'agence publique va combattre des cas « importants » d'activités anti-concurrencielle, alors que les consommateurs vont aussi agir face à des cas plus « mineurs ». La combinaison des deux régimes mène à un meilleurs bien-être que si une agence publique seule est en charge de la politique concurrentielle, parce que les consommateurs peuvent partiellement relacher la contrainte des ressources limitées de l'agence.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Université catholique de Louvain, Institut de recherches économiques et sociales 2004 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

We wish to thank John D. Hey and Claude d'Aspremont for helpful discussions. We also thank Paolo Buccirossi, Giuseppe Colangeio, Gianni De Fraja, Gianluca Femminis, Isabel Grilo and Gerd Weinrich for their comments. We have also greatly benefited from comments and suggestions provided by two anonymous referees. The usual disclaimer applies. The contents expressed in this paper are the authors' view on the issue analyzed and not that of the Italian Antitrust Authority. Correspondence to: G. Martini, Department of Management and Information Technology, University of Bergamo, viale Marconi 5, I-24044 Dalmine (BG), Italy. E-mail:[email protected]

References

Andreoni, J., Erard, B. and Feinstein, J. (1998), “Tax Compliance”, Journal of Economic Literature, 35, pp. 818860.Google Scholar
Banks, J.S. (1992), “Monopoly Pricing and Regulatory Oversight”, Journal of Economic and Management Strategy, 1, pp. 203–33.Google Scholar
Besanko, D. and Spulber, D.F. (1989a), “Antitrust Enforcement under Asymmetric Information”, The Economic Journal, 99, pp. 408–5.Google Scholar
Besanko, D. and Spulber, D.F. (1989b), “Delegated Law Enforcement and Noncooperative Behavior”, Journal of Law, Economics and Organization, 5, 1, pp. 2552.Google Scholar
Besanko, D. and Spulber, D.F. (1990), “Are Treble Damages Neutral? Sequential Equilibrium and Private Antitrust Enforcement”, American Economic Review, 80, pp. 870–87.Google Scholar
Bizjak, J.M. and Coles, J.L. (1995), “The Effect of Private Antitrust Litigation on the Stock-Market Valuation of the Firm”, American Economic Review, 85, pp. 436461.Google Scholar
Block, M.K., Nold, F.C. and Sidak, J.G. (1981), “The Deterrent Effect of Antitrust Enforcement”, Journal of Political Economy, 89, pp. 429–45.Google Scholar
Block, M.K., Feinstein, J.S. (1986), “The Spillover Effect of Antitrust Enforcement”, Review of Economics and Statistics, 68, pp. 122–31.Google Scholar
Carlton, D.W. and Perloff, J.M. (1994), Modern Industrial Organization, New York, Harper Collins College Publishers.Google Scholar
Laffont, J.J. and Tiróle, J. (1993), Theory of Incentives in Procurements and Regulation, Cambridge, Mass., The MIT Press.Google Scholar
Mailath, G.J., Okuno-Fujiwara, M. and Postlewaite, A. (1993), “Belief-based Refinements in Signaling Games”, Journal of Economic Theory, 60, pp. 241–76.Google Scholar
Martin, S. (2000), “Resource Allocation by a Competition Authority”, in Hope, E. (ed.), Competition Policy Analysis, Routledge.Google Scholar
Motta, M. and Polo, M. (2003), “Leniency Programs and Cartel Prosecution”, International Journal of Industrial Organization, 21, pp. 347379.Google Scholar
Reinganum, J.F. and Wilde, L.L. (1986), Equilibrium Verification and Reporting Policies in a Model of Tax Compliance, International Economic Review, 27, pp. 739–60.Google Scholar
Rogoff, K. (1985), “The Optimal Degree of Commitment to an Intermediate Monetary Target”, Quarterly Journal of Economics, 100, pp. 1169–89.Google Scholar
Ross, T.W. (1984), “Winners and Losers under the Robinson-Patman Act”, Journal of Law and Economics, 27, pp. 243–71.Google Scholar
Salant, S.W. (1987), “Treble Damage Awards in Private Lawsuits for Price Fixing”, Journal of Political Economy, 95, pp. 1326–36.Google Scholar
Salop, S.C. and White, L.J. (1988), “Private Antitrust Litigation : An Introduction and Framework”, in White, L.J. (ed.), Private Antitrust Litigation : New Evidence, New Learning, Cambridge, Mass., Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Schultz, C. (1999), “Monetary Policy, Delegation and Polarisation”, Economic Journal, 109, pp. 164178.Google Scholar
Souam, S. (1998), “Dissuasion de la collusion et efficacité de deux systèmes d'amendes”, Revue Economique, 49, pp. 755765.Google Scholar
Souam, S. (2001), “Optimal Antitrust Policy under Different Regimes of Fines”, International Journal of Industrial Organization, 19, pp. 126.Google Scholar
Sproul, M.F. (1993), “Antitrust and Prices”, Journal of Political Economy, 101, pp. 741–54.Google Scholar