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Avoiding the Bertrand Trap II: Cooperation. How do Coke & Pepsi Make Money? Coke and Pepsi sell essentially undifferentiated products Prices are widely.

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Presentation on theme: "Avoiding the Bertrand Trap II: Cooperation. How do Coke & Pepsi Make Money? Coke and Pepsi sell essentially undifferentiated products Prices are widely."— Presentation transcript:

1 Avoiding the Bertrand Trap II: Cooperation

2 How do Coke & Pepsi Make Money? Coke and Pepsi sell essentially undifferentiated products Prices are widely known, often advertised There are no consumer switching costs No evidence of serious limits on capacity No evidence of cost advantages

3 Coke and Pepsi Recognize Repeated Interaction Suppose Coke forbears cutting price today because it knows Pepsi will follow suit tomorrow. Suppose Pepsi forbears cutting price today because it knows Coke will follow suit tomorrow. Tradeoff for Coke or Pepsi is forgoing a larger market share today in order to avoid the Bertrand trap tomorrow.

4 Method 6: Exploit Repeated Play If firms play repeatedly, then can use repeated play to sustain a form of cooperation on price known as tacit collusion No firm cheats (undercuts rivals) because this will trigger a price war in the future (e.g., reversion to Bertrand competition).

5 To Cheat or Not to Cheat: That is the Question PDV of profits time 1 Cheat (undercut) Cooperate (tacitly collude) Looking just at today: Profits from just undercutting rivals and capturing entire market. Profits from matching rivals at monopoly price but sharing market.

6 To Cheat or Not to Cheat: That is the Question PDV of profits time 1 Cheat (undercut) Cooperate (tacitly collude) Now take into account the future!

7 To Cheat or Not to Cheat: That is the Question PDV of profits time 1 Cheat (undercut) Cooperate (tacitly collude) Benefit today But Bertrand trap forever after. Smaller benefits today (because split market). But positive benefits in future.

8 To Cheat or Not to Cheat: More Firms or Higher Interest Rate PDV of profits time 1 Cheat (undercut) Cooperate (tacitly collude)

9 Tacit Collusion Tacit collusion is easier to sustain when  fewer firms (four or fewer if excess capacity)  interest rate low

10 To Cheat or Not to Cheat: Dying Industry Expected PDV of profits time 1 Cheat (undercut) Cooperate (tacitly collude)

11 Dying Industries In fact, if “death date” known with certainty, then cooperation generally not sustainable at all. Backwards induction:  In last period there is no future period, so no punishment to deter cheating in last period. Hence cheating (Bertrand) in last period  But then same is true of penultimate period and so on back to first period.

12 General Phenomenon Firm going bankrupt not paid by other firms that owe it money. Management problems when boss announces she’s leaving. Basically don’t let others know the end is coming.

13 Making Tacit Collusion Work Incentive to cut price? Tacit collusion not an issue no yes Easy to detect price cuts? Tacit collusion will fail & the firms will find themselves in the Bertrand trap no Firms willing to punish? Can serious punishments be inflicted? yes Tacit collusion is sustainable in equilibrium

14 Electronic Components Distribution Industry How do we assess the potential for tacit collusion in the electronic components distribution industry?

15 Making Tacit Collusion Work Electronic Components Distribution Industry Incentive to cut price? Tacit collusion not an issue no yes Easy to detect price cuts? Tacit collusion will fail & the firms will find themselves in the Bertrand trap no Firms willing to punish? Can serious punishments be inflicted? yes Tacit collusion is sustainable in equilibrium

16 Making Tacit Collusion Work Airline Industry Incentive to cut price? Tacit collusion not an issue no yes Easy to detect price cuts? Tacit collusion will fail & the firms will find themselves in the Bertrand trap no Firms willing to punish? Can serious punishments be inflicted? yes Tacit collusion is sustainable in equilibrium

17 The Issue with Detection PDV of profits time 1 Cheat (undercut) Cooperate (tacitly collude) 2 Detection occurs

18 The Issue with Detection: Stochastic Discovery PDV of profits time 1 Cheat (undercut) Cooperate (tacitly collude) Detection occurs Possibly lost to mistaken price war

19 Exiting a Price War Need to signal that price war at end without engaging in illegal explicit collusion.  American Airlines and the NYT  Price leaders  Public adoption of means for facilitating tacit collusion

20 Facilitating Tacit Collusion: Improving Detection Firms want to make sure that  cheating is detected promptly  cheating is detected accurately Numerous devices to make this work  public posting of prices  simplified pricing airlines & per-mile pricing  collection & dissemination of prices (some antitrust issues—Maple Flooring Mfrs.’ Ass’n v. United States)

21 Making Punishments Severe PDV of profits time 1 Cheat (undercut) Cooperate (tacitly collude)

22 Making Punishments Severe PDV of profits time 1 Cheat (undercut) Cooperate (tacitly collude) Increase the severity of the punishment

23 How to Make Severe Most Favored Nation Clauses  MFN: If cut price today, give refund to past customers. Note: the other guy better adopt this too!  Also contemporaneous MFN: All customers get same price today (makes detection of price cutting easier)

24 How to Make Willing Build in “doomsday devices”  Dr. Strangelove Meeting the Competition Clauses (MCC)  state that will meet lowest price available just advertised policy or put into contracts (some antitrust issues)  if rival cuts price, either honor clause (a reputational or contractual obligation) or suffer consequences. We miss you Stanley

25 Tacit Collusion on Non-Price Dimensions to Lessen Price Competition When tacit collusion on price would be difficult, firms can tacitly collude to maintain conditions that lessen price competition Generally, these are conditions that make one of the assumptions of the Bertrand model fail. Concept of market discipline.

26 Tacit Collusion on Non-Price Competition Raising search costs  tacit agreements not to price advertise  not locating outlets near each other Raising switching costs  making products incompatible with rivals’  signing customers to long-term contracts  Note: As we will see, these can also serve to deter entry.

27 Tacit Collusion on Non-price Competition Restrict capacity  Firms can tacitly agree not to expand capacity  Note: can be difficult to monitor  Cereal makers & shelf space

28 Product Differentiation Tacitly agree to split market on non-price dimensions  location: non-overlapping territories (usually invites antitrust scrutiny)  product space: e.g., split market between high- end and low-end

29 Other Dimensions of Tacit Collusion R&D (Non-price) advertising No poaching


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