Title: Industrial policy, competition and antitrust: The Italian experience
1Industrial policy, competition and antitrust The
Italian experience
2Industrial policy in Italy A chronology
- 1933 IRI, the Institute for industrial
reconstruction, is created (after the 1929-31
crisis) - 1936 IRI controls 100 of the 3 major Italian
commercial banks and 21 of the capital of all
Italian corporate entities. IRI is strongly
separated from political power and managers are
supposed to maximize shareholders values - 1945 IRI controls 216 companies and has 135000
employees. Industrial sectors to be developed
steel, the chemical industry, highway
construction, car manufacturing,
telecommunications, air transport. - 1957 a Ministry in charge of State owned
companies is created. State owned companies are
meant to pursue strategic industrialization
objectives and political objectives which may
lead to returns below market values (social
returns higher than private returns). This is the
start of the soft budget constraint.
3Industrial policy in Italy A chronology
- 1970 IRI and ENI have over 500000 employees,
around 15 of total domestic employment. - 1992 a plan to privatize State owned companies
is adopted by the Government. - 1993 the ministry of State owned companies is
abolished - Today all banks are private. IRI is a foundation
and only the military industry is State owned.
Alitalia is in the process of being privatized.
ENI and ENEL continue to be controlled by the
State. Price control is abolished. Industrial
policy is suspended. How has this happened?
4The recent liberalization drive in Italy A
chronology
- 1957 Italy is among the funding members of the
EC. The Treaty is neutral with respect of
ownership (indifference between private and State
ownership). - The European Union is the major force of
liberalization in the country. The EU is much
more than a free trade zone. - 1990 Italy adopts an EC inspired domestic
competition law. Big business is very much in
favor because there are no exceptions. The law
empowers the Authority with very independent
advocacy powers.
5The enforcement of the antitrust law in Italy
6Italian cases on abuse of dominance
- Marinzulich/Tirrernia (maritime transport)
- Ibar/Aeroporti di Roma (airport services)
- 1995De Montis Catering/Aeroporti di Roma
(airlines catering services) Telesystem/Sip
(telecommunications) Tekal/Italcementi
(cement) - 1996 Compagnia portuale di Brindisi (harbour
services) - 1997 Albacom/Telecom Italia Circuiti dedicati
(telecommunications) - 1998 Consorzio Risposta/Ente Poste Italiane
(postal services) - 2000 Associazione italiana Internet
provider/Telecom (telecommunications) - 2001 Assoviaggi- Alitalia (air transport)
- 2002 Diano/Tourist Caronte (ferry boat services)
- 2006 ENI-Transtunisian pipeline (gas)
- 2007 Merck/Principi attivi (pharmaceuticals)
7Leniency
- 1978 First leniency program for the discovery
of hard core cartels introduced in the US
(available only for new cases and wide discretion
for the Administration) - 1994 Second US program (immunity is automatic,
it can be granted also on existing cases,
immunity is extended to individuals. 20 cases a
year) - 1996 First Community program (immunity is not
automatic and decision is taken at the end of the
procedure) Hundred of cases, many not concluded - 2006 second Community program (Conditions for
immunity are clarified and discretion on the part
of the Commission is strongly reduced) - 2007 Italian program very similar to the
Community program
8Community experience in cartel repression
- 1998 British sugar 4 50 milions Preinsulated
pipes 10 92 millions Alloy surcharge 6 27
millions Steamless steel tubes 8 99 millions - 2000 Lysine 5
- 2001 carbonless paper 11 313 millions Sappi 0
Vitamins 8, graphite electrodes 7, sodium
gluconate 6, Citric acid 5 - 2002 methionine 3 120 millions, Aventis 0 Food
flavour enhancers 4, 2 Fine art auction houses
2, Specialty graphite 8 (american origin) - 2003 Sorbates 5 130 millions Chisso 0 Electrical
and mechanical carbon and graphite products 6 101
millions, Cruciale 0 Organic peroxides 6 69
millions, Akzo 0 Industrial tubes 12 229
millions, Mueller 0 - 2004 Copper plumbing tubes 5 74 millions,
PO/Needles 3 30 millions, Entaco 0 Choline
chloride 3 66 millions - 2005 Monochloroacetic acid 5 217 millions,
Clariant 0 Industrial thread 9 44 millions
Industrial bags 14 291 millions, British
Polithene 0 Rubber chemicals 4 76 millions,
Flexsys 0 - 2006 Hydrogen peroxide and perborate 9 388
millions, Degussa 0 Methacrylates 6 344
millions, Degussa 0 Bitume 14 267 millions, BP
0 Copper fittings 12 315 millions, Mueller 0
Syntetic rubber 6 519 millions, Bayer 0
9Italian experience with cartels
- 1992 Ready made concrete
- 1993 Cement
- 1998 Accountants
- 1999 Chemical products Mobile services Bitumen
- 2000 Certified accountants car insurance
- 2002 Air transport (fuel charge), ticket
restaurants - 2003 tests for diabetes cigarettes
- 2005 Baby Milk
- 2006 Industrial gases disinfectants jet fuel
- 2007 Marine coating Chipboard panels
10The recent liberalization drive in Italy A
chronology
- 1992 The antitrust authority starts delivering
its annual report in Parliament. Press/TV
coverage on the importance of competition - 1998 The Minister of Industry, inspired by the
1993 advocacy report by the Competition
Authority, liberalizes retail trade (fully
liberalizing the opening of small shops up to 250
m2, subjecting to a regional plan the opening of
medium and large surfaces). - The law was criticized by incumbent retail
traders of all dimensions. In the process of
approval, the Parliament introduces the
prohibition of sales below costs. The Authority
argues against it, but is not followed.
11The recent liberalization drive in Italy A
chronology
- 1999 Italy joins the European Monetary Union and
the exchange rate becomes fixed. Competitive
devaluations are no longer possible - 2001 Oecd examines Italy on regulatory reform.
Concern over high degree of regulatory
restrictions - 1990-2007 the Authority issues more than 400
advocacy reports. Most of them are ignored. They
are followed when they back a European initiative
where compliance is mandated or when the powers
of the Authority are at stake
12The recent liberalization drive in Italy A
chronology
- June 2006 the Minister of industry issues a
decree with the objective of liberalizing a
number of activities, improving consumer
protection, strengthening the enforcement powers
of the Authority. A lot of categories are
affected. - January 2007 the Minister issues a second
liberalization decree - The press release of the Ministry contains
specific reference to the advocacy reports of
the Authority
13The recent liberalization drive in Italy
- Increased powers to the competition authority
leniency programs, interim measures, commitment
decisions - Professions minimum tariffs abolished
informative advertisement, interdisciplinary
partnerships and result pricing (contingency
fees) allowed. - Legal monopoly of pharmacies on OTC drugs
abolished.
14The recent liberalization drive in Italy
- Access to bread making fully liberalized and
entry no longer subject to the opinion of a
commission nor to market analysis. - Commissions by peers responsible for authorizing
access abolished in a number of activities - In retail trade and food/drink all sorts of
limitations to entry/expansion based on minimum
distances, on market shares, on the portfolio of
products to be carried abolished.
15The recent liberalization drive in Italy
- Car insurance Exclusive dealing requirements
abolished - Banking depositors have to be informed about
changes in the conditions of supply and closing
charges abolished - Region/municipality owned corporations cannot
operate freely on the market but only for the
benefit of the controlling body - Taxi service requirement that taxi licenses be
granted only to individuals abolished doubling
the number of licenses in the country (this was
only proposed)
16The recent liberalization drive in Italy
- The access to the activity of barbers, hair
dressers, tourist guides, driving schools is
liberalized - Highways should make sure drivers are fully
informed about gasoline prices - The prohibition of exclusive dealing is extended
to all insurance products - Prices for air services should be publicized
gross of all costs and taxes - Mortgages are transferable without costs
- Prepaid purchases of telecommunication services
should not be priced with a two part tariff and
should not contain a deadline.
17The recent liberalization drive in Italy
- Strong reaction by professionals and by banks
based on general interest considerations (TRUST,
UNIVERSAL SERVICE STABILITY) - Strong reaction by taxi drivers protesting for
income losses (strikes in major cities) - Taxi service II greater flexibility in shifts
management and increase in the number of licenses
to be decided by municipalities - Decree approved with no other change
18The recent liberalization drive in ItalySome
conclusions
- According to recent polls 70 Italians are in
favor of liberalization efforts. For all other
policies consensus seldom reaches 50. - The feared destructions associated with
competition do not come about as quickly as
feared. Also benefits in terms of growth or
innovation are slow to appear. - Once competition is on the political agenda, the
suggestions of the competition Authority become
an essential facility. The Authority can also
help in bringing competition in the political
agenda. International organizations should back
domestic pro-reform institutions - Liberalizing pays off politically. It has to be
all over the board. Protests cancel each other
out. Same conclusion as Hilmer (1992)
19Antitrust enforcement and the role of the
AuthoritySome conclusions
- Antitrust enforcement has been used to accompany
the liberalization effort. Business sees
antitrust as a discipline but also as a tool for
growth and competitiveness - Abuse decisions have been particularly important
in telecommunications, energy, airport services,
maritime transport, etc. - The case law of the EC helped a lot (market
definition, definition of what is an enterprise,
definition of the relevant market, definition of
an abuse) by narrowing down the possible
interpretations of the legal provisions. - Advocacy was effective in creating a culture of
competition. The reports of the Authority became
the essential facility of market orineted
reforms. - Governments need a competition contraint
(constitutional or international).