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Ch 10 Antitrust Law and Business

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Title: Ch 10 Antitrust Law and Business


1
Ch 10 -Antitrust Law and Business
  • Todays agenda
  • Guidelines for Exam 1
  • Deregulation
  • Antitrust law
  • Microsoft case discussion

2
Ch 10 -Antitrust Law and Business
  • Guidelines for Exam 1
  • 1 page of notes
  • 2 caselets on ethical decision-making, similar to
    assignment and discussion cases
  • 2 essay questions
  • Content Everything till Reform in the regulatory
    arena, Chapter 9
  • Focus will be on matters discussed in class
  • Questions will involve tests of conceptual
    understanding, and not memorization
  • Grading criteria will be similar to those used
    for assignments usage of concepts, data, writing
    skills, analytical ability. Grades are not curved
  • Bring answer books, please
  • Sample questions
  • Partial revision next week

3
Ch 10 -Antitrust Law and Business
  • Sample essay questions
  • List and explain three reasons why firms are
    under increasing pressure to be socially
    responsible
  • List and explain three reasons why firms might
    resist the pressure to be socially responsible
  • List and explain three rationales for regulation
  • Distinguish between duty-based and outcome-based
    theories of ethics
  • List and explain three harmful effects that MNCs
    can have on host countries
  • Explain the effects of a protectionist
    international trade policy on the US economy

4
Ch 10 -Antitrust Law and Business
  • Antitrust laws
  • Aimed at curbing anti-competitive trade practices
  • Explained by countervailing power theory
  • Early concerns related to the adverse impact on
    consumers
  • Today, antitrust law is also concerned with
    effects of market power on innovation and
    employment. How and why?
  • This law is a good example of stakeholder theory
    in action. While collusion among, say, airline
    companies whilst setting prices may benefit
    shareholders and employees, it has an unfair
    impact both on service prices and on fair traders

5
Ch 10 -Antitrust Law and Business
  • Antitrust laws
  • Free-market opponents of regulation say there is
    no need for antitrust regulation. If firms in an
    industry practice unfair practices such as
    monopolization, they will earn higher profits. In
    the long run, the higher profitability of the
    industry will attract new entrants who will
    undercut incumbents, and thus restore
    competitiveness. Government regulators have no
    understanding of the realities of the global
    marketplace, and will cause more harm than good
    moreover, we need to also consider the economic
    costs of regulation. What do you think of this
    view?

6
Ch 10 -Antitrust Law and Business
  • Major Laws
  • Sherman Antitrust Act
  • Applies to
  • Interstate commerce
  • US nationals abroad engaged in trade
  • Provisions
  • S.1 Prohibits conspiracies to restrain trade
    (agreements between firms)
  • S.2 Anti competitive conduct by individuals /
    groups (misuse of monopoly power by an individual
    firm)

7
Ch 10 -Antitrust Law and Business
  • Court Interpretation
  • Rule of Reason principle
  • Post Standard Oil case
  • Purpose, power effects of the action are
    considered when deciding whether an action is
    legal or otherwise
  • Per se Rule
  • Socony oil case, 1940
  • Certain practices are treated as anticompetitive
    by themselves (per se) firms have no defenses in
    their favor
  • Price Fixing, Group Boycott, Horizontal Market
    Division

8
Ch 10 -Antitrust Law and Business
  • Enforcement of the law
  • By the Justice Department
  • Proof of
  • Injury to business activities of a competitor or
    to consumers
  • Cause effect relationship

9
Ch 10 -Antitrust Law and Business
  • S.1 Violations
  • Horizontal Restraints
  • By Competitors
  • Price Fixing
  • Two supermarkets agree that one will charge 3.50
    for a gallon of milk, and the other 3.60. Both
    prices are fair in the locality
  • Group Boycott
  • Bargain Basement, Inc., is a discount retailer.
    It buys brand name products from various
    manufacturers and sells them at below the
    suggested retail price. This practice has
    angered some of those manufacturers who believe
    that their products are high quality and should
    not be sold at bargain basement prices. Several
    of those manufacturers agree that they will no
    longer sell their products to Bargain Basement.
    Illegal
  • Arlee owns a fast food franchise. He purchases
    his supplies from various distributors around the
    area. Arlees soft drink distributor decides not
    to deal with Arlee anymore, because Arlee is too
    demanding and always pays his bills late.
    Several other distributors individually reach the
    same decision. Legal

10
Ch 10 -Antitrust Law and Business
  • S.1 Violations
  • Horizontal Restraints
  • By Competitors
  • Horizontal Market Division
  • Dell and HP agree to sell computers only in the
    West and East of the US respectively
  • Association
  • Joint Venture

11
Ch 10 -Antitrust Law and Business
  • S.1 Violations
  • Vertical Restraints
  • Distribution process
  • Resale Price Maintenance
  • Lexus tells its dealers that their dealership
    will be revoked if they sell their cars below a
    price of 70,000
  • When would such an arrangement make business
    sense?
  • When quality of service is paramount
  • Refusal to deal

12
Ch 10 -Antitrust Law and Business
  • S 2 Violations
  • Monopolization
  • No Conspiracy requirement
  • Monopolization aggressive exclusion of
    competition
  • Elements
  • Monopoly Power
  • Willful acquisition of that power
  • Exceptions
  • Historical accident. E.g. VHS v. Betamax
  • Business acumen. E.g. Patents
  • Industry characteristics. E.g. Ebay

13
Ch 10 -Antitrust Law and Business
  • Clayton Act
  • Complement to Sherman Act
  • Enforced by Justice Department/Federal Trade
    Commission
  • S2 Price Discrimination
  • Illegal when not due to cost differences, and
  • Results in lessened competition
  • No selective under cutting except in good faith
  • Courts no longer treat price discrimination as an
    antitrust activity

14
Ch 10 -Antitrust Law and Business
  • S.3- Exclusionary Practices
  • Exclusive dealing
  • Lexus threatens to revoke a dealership if the
    dealer also sells Ford cars
  • Tying sales
  • A manufacturer makes two products, Axobos and
    Belandos. Axobos are in very high demand, but
    Belandos are not. The manufacturer requires
    everyone who wants to buy any Axobos to also buy
    some Belandos
  • A printer manufacturer will sell you a printer
    only if you agree to buy paper manufactured by
    them
  • A printer manufacturer will sell you a printer
    only if you agree to buy cartridges manufactured
    by them. Is this the same as the previous
    illustration?

15
Ch 10 -Antitrust Law and Business
  • S 7- Mergers
  • Horizontal
  • Mergers between competitors
  • Legality depends on
  • Level of industry concentration
  • Competitive effects
  • Financial distress
  • Vertical
  • Mergers involving forward or backward integration
  • Firms acquiring suppliers or distributors
  • Illegal if
  • Excludes competitors from any business segment
  • Conglomerate
  • Legality determined on a case-by-case basis

16
Ch 10 -Antitrust Law and Business
  • Monopolies and consumers
  • Constrained by substitutes and budgets
  • Anti competitive behavior
  • Is the power the result of willful acquisition
    and maintenance?
  • Patent-based market power permissible
  • Natural Monopoly
  • Intent
  • Predatory pricing
  • The relevance of market structure
  • Mergers and consumers
  • Concentration, e.g. Big 6
  • Enforcement
  • Penalties, imprisonment, blockage of alliance

17
Ch 10 -Antitrust Law and Business
  • Antitrust Dilemmas in Foreign Trade
  • Lack of antitrust enforcement by foreign
    countries may place US firms at a disadvantage
  • Keiretsu and Chaebol (Japanese and Korean
    cartels)
  • European consortiums (Airbus)
  • Foreign enforcement
  • Limits of antitrust laws - time, market
    definition, etc
  • Impact of globalization
  • Size does matter. E.g. banking industry
    consolidation
  • Effects

18
Ch 10 -Antitrust Law and Business
  • Microsoft Case
  • What evidence does the DOJ present to prove its
    case against MS?
  • What valid defenses did/could MS present?
  • On balance, do you think MS has an adverse or
    beneficial impact on consumers, competitors and
    innovation? Was MSs conduct in this case
    socially responsible?

19
Should MS be subjected to antitrust law?
  • Key question is there evidence of unfair
    business practices that were injurious to
    competitors and, ultimately, to competitors?
  • The evidence
  • Exclusionary agreements
  • Tying sales
  • Monopolization of operating systems
  • Monopolization of browsers
  • Predatory pricing
  • Evidence of monopolization
  • Building incompatibility into products
  • Removing IE from Add/Delete menu
  • Withholding APIs
  • Internal memos and correspondence

20
Should MS be subjected to antitrust law?
  • But was the behavior injurious to consumers?
  • Yes, reduced choice
  • No, look at the economics of the industry. Its a
    natural monopoly, indicated by the presence of
    network externalities. The greater the market
    share of one players product, the more valuable
    it is to the consumer. In this case, reduced
    choice is, counterintuitively, good for the
    consumer
  • Also, look at the pace of change and the extent
    of competitiveness in the industry
  • But the bottomline question remains, if the
    product is of value to the customer, what is the
    need for the seller to engage in unfair
    practices?

21
Should MS be subjected to antitrust law?
  • What happens to innovation as a result of such
    conduct?
  • Should efficiency considerations trump notions of
    fairness and business ethics?
  • The result of the case
  • MS got away with a slap on the wrist
  • Reason While the letter of the regulation is
    unambiguous by itself, the courts were not
    confident of their ability to apply it to an
    industry as complex as the technology sector
  • Also, the adverse impact of structural remedies
    could be catastrophic for the economy
  • A typical illustration of regulation which is
    necessary but often ineffective

22
The dilemma of regulation
  • As business becomes more complex, the greater is
    the need for regulation, and the corresponding
    costs
  • The evidence the present government has
    increased spending by 27
  • So while the costs of regulation are increasingly
    beyond control, the effectiveness of regulation
    appears to be diminishing, making the US a
    high-cost economy but not necessarily a
    high-return one

23
The dilemma of regulation
  • What are the solutions?
  • Decrease the need for regulation through
  • Greater degree of ethical behavior
  • Better corporate governance
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