Title: Vertical Restraints
1Vertical Restraints
2Vertical Relationships
- vertical relationships are those among sellers of
goods and services that are complements to each
other in demand - horizontal relationships are those among sellers
of substitutes in demand.
3Vertical Relationships
- The most familiar vertical relationships are
between manufacturers and input suppliers. - designation of one level as upstream and the
other as downstream is conceptually convenient - but arbitrary - for example, retailers could be
thought of as upstream to manufacturers since
they sell a key input retailing services to
manufacturers
4Vertical Restraints on Competition include
- Resale price maintenance
- Territorial restraints
- Exclusive territories
- Location clauses
- Exclusive dealing
- Partial Integration
- Tying Agreements
5Vertical Restraints
- Resale price maintenance or RPM means that the
supplier requires the dealer to resell its
product at some set price. - Can be either minimum or maximum
- minimum RPM if Nintendo requires its dealers to
sell its video games at no less than 40 - Maximum RPM if the NY Times required its home
delivery distributors to sell the paper for no
more than 10 per week
6Vertical Restraints on Competition
- Market allocation
- territorial restraint is an agreement between the
supplier and the dealer that the supplier will
not allow any other dealer to locate within a
certain territory thereby preserving an
exclusive marketing territory to that dealer. - Practice is widespread in the automobile industry
- Customer allocation is an agreement that
establishes the classes of customers to whom a
dealer may sell to. - Location Clauses Retailers can only sell from a
specified retail location -
7Vertical Restraints on Competition
- Exclusive dealership agreements retailers can
only carry the products of one manufacturer - Illustrated by an agreement between an oil
company and an independent service station that
the service station would buy all of its oil and
gasoline from the oil company
8Vertical Restraints on Competition
- Partial Integration The manufacturer owns key
inputs of the retailers (e.g., land and
buildings) - Example McDonalds
9Vertical Restraints on Competition
- Tying refers to the practice of a supplier
agreeing to sell its customer one product (the
tying good) only if the customer agrees to
purchase all of its requirements for another
product (the tied product) from the supplier - Example is IBMs practice of leasing its
tabulating machines on the condition that the
customer purchase all of its needs for tabulating
cards from IBM
10Legal Treatment of Vertical Restraints
- Practices are generally judged under Section I of
the Sherman Act or Section 3 of the Clayton Act - RPM has been held to be illegal per se under the
Sherman Act. It is viewed by the courts as
simply a vertical form of price fixing. - Section 3 of the Clayton Act specifically
mentions both exclusive dealing and tying and
holds them to be illegal where the effect may be
to substantially lessen competition or tend to
create a monopoly.
11Anticompetitive Effect of Vertical Price Fixing
(RPM)
- The essential antitrust argument supporting
illegality of RPM is that such agreements produce
the same effects as horizontal price fixing among
dealers - What might account for this behavior?
12Anticompetitive Effect of Vertical Price Fixing
(RPM)
- One possible explanation is when there is a
cartel among manufacturers that cannot observe
each others prices but can observe retail prices.
They may fear that price wars among retailers
will tempt manufacturers to cut their prices
thereby undermining the cartel. - Facilitating practice for a dealer cartel
13Possible Justifications
- The answer to the policy question of how should
resale price maintenance agreements be treated
depends on the weight you attach to the following
contentions - Manufacturers have differing incentives
- the retail price a manufacturer would sell is
almost assuredly different from the price a
retail cartel would set. WHY? - Some argue that the manufacturer can be depended
upon to set the minimum retail price at
reasonable or efficient levels
14Possible Justifications
- Maximum resale prices the ability of the
supplier to limit the dealers price will increase
its own profitability - How does this reduce consumer welfare?
15Possible Justifications
- Attracting Dealers
- May assure margins and thereby induce dealers to
stock and promote the brand - Inducing Desired Services
- Computer stores with technically competent
personnel vs Internet purchases - Is this argument persuasive? Do higher markups
ensure dealers will undertake outlays on nonprice
competition? Why cant the market be depended on
to solve this problem?
16Possible Justifications
- Product Image and loss Leaders
- It is argued that for some products like wine or
perfume price cuts might actually reduce sales
volume - Preservation of small business
- Pressure by small business community advocating
resale price maintenance - Are such attitudes favoring soft competition in
the public interest?
17Questions on Vertical Restraints
- Suppose the product is complex or retailing is
complex - Retailers require training in business methods
- general training beneficial for any business
- specific training beneficial only for this
business or product - Retailers make investments to promote the product
- Advertising or promotion
- Pre-sale information about the product
- Post-sale service for the product
- Manufacturers make investments to promote the
product
18Retailer Training
- Retail training is specific to the manufacturers
product - Training about how to explain and sell the
product - Training how to service and repair the product
- NO problem knowledge is public good, but no
externality - Retail training is general to any product
- Training how to manage a retail business
- Training how to sell any product in the industry
- Problem knowledge is a public good, AND positive
externalities
19Retailer Training
- Retail training is general to any product
(continued) - Problem knowledge is a public good, AND positive
externalities - To whom? Free-riders are manufacturers of
substitute products that could be distributed by
the same retailers - Solution Exclusive Dealing
- Retailers cannot use their general training to
sell the products of other manufacturers
20Retail Advertising
- Specific Advertising by the Retailer
- Location of the store, products carried
- NO Problem knowledge is a public good, but no
externality - General Advertising by the Retailer
- Product advertising
- Problem knowledge is a public good AND positive
externalities
21Retail Advertising
- General Advertising by the Retailer
- To whom? Free-riders are other retailers
carrying the same product in the same area, they
need only do specific advertising - Solution Location Clauses or Exclusive
Territories - Manufacturers can separate retailers, giving each
a local monopoly - Retailers then have an incentive to advertise and
promote the product in their local area because
they appropriate all the benefits
22Retail Services
- Post-Sale Service increases the value of the
product - Repair shop, exchange program
- NO problem retailers can exclude consumers who
purchased from other retailers, and can
appropriate the value of these services - Pre-Sale Service increases knowledge about the
product - Salesmen who provide information, showroom for
the product - Problem Free-riders are consumers who can learn
about the product, but then purchase it at a
lower price from a discounter
23Retail Services
- Solution Location Clauses or Exclusive
Territories - Separating retailers make it more costly for
consumers to shop for price giving each retailer
a local monopoly - How can the manufacturer deal with catalog or
website sales?
24Franchising
- How does McDonalds generate revenue from its
franchisees? - Revenue from sale of supplies? Some yes
- Royalties on the trademark name? Yes some
- Leases on the land and the buildings? Yes the big
money - Who decided where to put each store? McDonalds
- Why? Cover the market and minimize consumer
transportation costs - Why? Compete with other franchisers not among
franchisees
25Franchising
- Why Does McDonalds own the building? Partial
integration - Suppose franchisee owns the building and must be
terminated - If building is used for another fast food
business, could create a negative externality on
McDonalds brand image - Consumer confusion when McDonalds opens another
franchise in the same geographic area
26FTC v. CD Distributors (2000)
- Minimum Advertised Price (MAPS)
- CD distributors provide payments to retailers for
local advertising - But in return, the CD distributors require the
retailers not to advertise prices below a minimum
level fixed by the distributor - But, the retailer cannot advertise these lower
prices
27FTC v. CD Distributors (2000)
- Minimum Resale Price Maintenance is ILLEGAL per
se - Map program does not really set the minimum
retail price because the retailer can charge
lower prices for the CDs - What is the point of setting lower prices if the
retailer cannot tell consumers that it has lower
prices?
28FTC v. CD Distributors (2000)
- FTC sues and obtains a settlement to end MAPS
- Section 5 of FTC Act prohibits unfair methods of
competition - MAPs can facilitate collusion among the CD
distributors
29Dr. Miles Medical Co. v. John D. Park Sons
(1911)
- The plaintiff was a manufacturer of proprietary
medicines. The drugs were sold under an
agreement that the drugs would sell at a price
set by Dr. Miles. - The defendant was a wholesale drug concern that
refused to enter into a required RPM contract - Procured the medicines by inducing those who have
entered into the contracts to violate resale
provisions
30- Dr Miles argued the manufacturer may make and
sell or not as he chooses, he may affix
conditions as to the use of the article or as to
the prices at which the purchasers may dispose of
it. - Does it follow that because a manufacturer can
choose to make or sell that he can also impose
conditions as to the use of the article or as to
the prices at which purchasers may dispose of it?
31Dr. Miles Medical Co. v. John D. Park Sons
(1911)
- The court found the disposal of the goods after
their sale to dealers, the basic element of RPM
agreements were invalid under common law - Established that RPMs were naked restraints and
were illegal under the standards established in
Addyston Pipe
32United States v. Colgate Company (1919)
- Court seemed to open a loophole
- In the absence of any purpose to create or
maintain a monopoly, the act does not restrict
the long recognized right of trader or
manufacturer engaged in an entirely private
business, freely to exercise his own independent
discretion as to the parties with whom he will
deal. And of course he may announce in advance
the circumstances under which he will refuse to
sell. - In Dr. Miles the unlawful combination was
effected through the contracts which undertook to
prevent dealers from freely exercising the right
to sell.
33Monsanto v. Spray-Rite 1984 (KW Case 15)
- Monsanto is a major manufacturer of chemical
products which declined to renew its
distributorship with Spray-Rite - Spray-Rite Service Corporation is a small Iowa
Herbicide distributor - Low-margin, high volume operation selling
primarily to large seed-corn companies, dealers
and sprayers.
34Monsanto v. Spray-Rite 1984 (KW Case 15)
- In 1967 Monsanto decided to change its marketing
strategy in order to stress dealer education. - It announced it would appoint dealers for 1 year
terms and that it would renew based on the
following criteria. - Whether the distributors primary activity was
soliciting sales from dealers - Whether the distributor employed trained salesmen
- Whether the distributor could be expected to
exploit fully the market area
35Monsanto v. Spray-Rite 1984 (KW Case 15)
- In 1968 Monsanto declined to renew Spray-Rites
distributorship - Spray-Rite sued alleging that Monsanto and some
of its distributors conspired to fix the retail
prices of Monsantos herbicides
36Monsanto v. Spray-Rite 1984 (KW Case 15)
- The lower Court stated that proof of termination
following competitor complaints is sufficient to
support an inference of concerted action. - Court of Appeals held that a plaintiff can
survive if it shows that a manufacturer
terminated a price cutting distributor in
response to or following complaints by other
distributors - Supreme Court In 1968 Monsanto declined to renew
Spray-Rites distributorship - Do a manufacturer and its distributors have
legitimate reasons for exchanging price
information? - Need to distinguish independent action from
concerted action on nonprice restrictions from
price-fixing agreements
37Monsanto v. Spray-Rite 1984 (KW Case 15)
- The correct standard is that there must be
evidence that tends to exclude the possibility of
independent action by the manufacturer and
distributor. That is, there must be direct or
circumstantial evidence that reasonably tends to
prove that the manufacturer and others had a
conscious commitment to a common scheme designed
to achieve an unlawful objective.
38Business Electronics v. Sharp (1988)
- Involved the cancellation of a price-cutting
dealer by a manufacturer of consumer electronics - Burgess states that Sharpe placed the theory of
efficiency enhancement ahead of the theory of
restraint as the more plausible explanation for
RPM behavior