CCI and Cartelisation

In News

  • The Competition Commission of India (CCI) recently fined 3 beer companies and then gave them a varying degree of relief.

Complete Incident

  • CCI found that 3 beer companies had colluded to fix beer prices for a full decade (2009- 2018).
  • As a result, the CCI slapped a penalty of Rs 873 crore for cartelisation in the sale and supply of beer in 10 states.

Cartel: Definition

  • According to CCI, a “Cartel includes an association of producers, sellers, distributors, traders or service providers
    • who, by agreement amongst themselves, 
    • limit, control or attempt to control the production, distribution, sale or price of, or, trade in goods or provision of services”.
  • The International Competition Network has a simpler definition in form of 3 common components of a cartel:
    • An agreement: Maybe formal and written or informal or unwritten.
      • Cartels almost invariably involve secret conspiracies.
    • Between competitors: It refers to companies at the same level of the economy (manufacturers, distributors, or retailers) in direct competition with each other to sell goods or provide services.
    • To restrict competition: It is the conduct that targets open competition from benign, ordinary course of business agreements between firms.
  • The  International Competition Network is a global body dedicated to enforcing competition law.

Functioning of Cartels

  • According to ICN, 4 categories of conduct that are commonly identified across jurisdictions (countries) are:
    • Price-fixing;
    • Output restrictions;
    • Market allocation and
    • Bid-rigging
  • Bruce Wardhaugh in his book titled Cartels, Markets and Crime explains that participants in hard-core Cartels substitute cooperation for competition.
    • They do this by agreeing to insulate themselves from the rigours of a competitive marketplace.

Ill Effects of the Cartels

  • Adversely affect efficiency in a market economy:
    • According to the OECD, “A successful cartel raises the price above the competitive level and reduces output.
    • Thus it reduces the efficiency of the overall economy.
      • OECD stands for Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
  • Black marketing, Hoarding and Poverty by excluding consumers:
    • By artificially holding back the supply or raising prices in a coordinated manner, companies 
      • either force some consumers out of the market by making the commodity (say, beer) more scarce or
      • by earning profits that free competition would not have allowed.
  • Undermine overall economic efficiency and innovations:
    • A cartel shelters its members from full exposure to market forces, reducing pressures on them to control costs and innovate.

Cartels versus monopolies: Which one is more Harmful?

  • Monopolies are bad for both individual consumer interest as well as the society at large because
    • a monopolist completely dominates and then often abuses this dominance 
      • either in the form of charging higher than warranted prices 
      • or by providing lower than the warranted quality of the good or service in question.
  • As per  Bruce Wardhaugh, Monopoly distorts the market in 2 ways
    • Fewer investments towards making the methods of production more efficient
    • Reduced product innovation
    • Both the aforementioned problems get aggravated in cartels.

Monopoly

Cartelisation

  • Both end up charging higher prices than actual worth.
  • But Monopolists may be forced to undertake product innovation due to fear of new entrants.
  • Monopolists again may be apprehensive of less expensive technology entering the market. It will force him to make necessary upgrades to Production efficiency.
  • Both end up charging higher prices than actual worth.
  • Here, due to the explicit agreement of non-competition and profit guarantees among cartels, any incentive to improve one’s product is removed.
  • In a cartel, there is no fear of new entrants being more efficient as the cartel will lobby and keep them out or merge them in the cartel.
  • Thus, in a nutshell, these social costs of reduced product innovation may be greater with cartels.
    • In other words, apart from the whole issue of charging higher prices, 
      • cartels (as against monopolists) 
        • neither has any incentive to invest in research aimed at improving their product 
        • nor do they see any reason why they should boost investments towards making the methods of production more efficient.
  • The end result is that both the individual consumer as well as the society at large suffers.

Way Forward

  • To Sop Cartelisation, one needs to 
    • Identify Cartels
      • Cartels are not easy to detect and identify.
    • Provision for strong deterrence
      • A monetary penalty that exceeds the gains amassed by the cartel.
  • Challenges to these steps
    • It is not always easy to ascertain the exact gains from cartelisation.
    • Lower Prosecution Rate: 1 in 6 or 7 cartels are detected and prosecuted, implying a multiple of at least six as per the OECD document.
  • 100% relief should not have been provided to Anheuser Busch InBev India 
  • Further, there is a need to incentivise whistleblowers exposing cartels and their functions.

Competition Commission of India (CCI)

  • It is the competition regulator in India. 
  • Established in 2003 under the provisions of the Competition Act 2002  but became fully functional by 2009. 
  • The Competition (Amendment) Act, 2007 was enacted to amend the Competition Act, 2002.
    • This led to the establishment of the Competition Appellate Tribunal.
  • Later, the Competition Appellate Tribunal (COMPAT) was replaced with the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) in 2017.
  • Aim: 
    • To establish a competitive environment in the Indian economy through proactive engagement with all the stakeholders, the government, and international jurisdiction. 
  • Objectives of Commission
    • To prevent practices that harm the competition.
    • To promote and sustain competition in markets.
    • To protect the interests of consumers.
    • To ensure freedom of trade.
  • Members: 3 full-time members
    • 1 Chair person+ 2 Members
    • Eligibility
      • They shall be a person of ability, integrity
      • And who, has been, or is qualified to be a judge of a High Court
      • Or, has special knowledge of, and professional experience of not less than 15 years in 
        • international trade, economics, business, commerce, law, finance, accountancy, management, industry, public affairs, administration 
      • or in any other matter which, in the opinion of the Central Government, may be useful to the Commission.

Source: IE

 

Other News of the Day

In News The Delhi Board of School Education (DBSE) with an International Baccalaureate (IB) curriculum, began schools for their first batch. The International Baccalaureate (IB) is a global community of educationists, who have engaged with 5500 schools across 159 countries. About Schools of Specialised Excellence (SOSE) offer specialised education to students of classes 9 to...
Read More

In Context  Recently, the Supreme Court held in a judgment that the right of an institution, whether run by a majority or minority community, to get government aid is not a fundamental right. Both have to equally follow the rules and conditions of the aid. Background  The judgment came in an appeal filed by Uttar...
Read More

In News  The Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) successfully tested the Akash Prime missile from the Integrated Test Range at Chandipur, Odisha. The missile intercepted and destroyed an unmanned aerial target mimicking enemy aircraft, in its maiden flight test after improvements. About  The Akash Prime is a medium-range mobile surface-to-air missile (SAM) system developed...
Read More

In News  Recently, the 201st birth anniversary of Ishwar Chand Vidyasagar was observed.                                                                  Image Courtesy: ET About  The title 'Vidyasagar' (ocean of knowledge) was given to him due to his vast knowledge in almost all the subjects.  Poet Michael Madhusudan Dutta while writing about Ishwar Iswar Chandra Vidyasagar Chandra said: "The genius and wisdom of...
Read More

In News The US is planning projects in Latin America countering China’s Belt and Road Initiative. About A delegation of diplomatic officials is tasked with turning Build Back Better World (B3W), the international infrastructure investment initiative announced by the Group of Seven richest democracies in June, into reality. The trip will allow US officials to...
Read More

In News  Recently, the Prime Minister of India officially released new varieties of rice named ‘Pusa Basmati 1979 ‘and ‘Pusa Basmati 1985’. About  The Indian Agricultural Research Institute (IARI) developed the country’s first-ever non-GM (genetically modified) herbicide-tolerant rice varieties. The varieties contain a mutated acetolactate synthase (ALS) gene making it possible for farmers to spray...
Read More

In News  Recently, Pradhan Mantri Sahaj Bijli Har Ghar Yojana (SAUBHAGYA) completed four years of successful implementation. Achievements of 4 years  Since the start of SAUBHAGYA, 2.82 crore houses have been electrified.  As of March 2019, 2.63 crore un-electrified households in rural and urban areas of the country had received electricity connections in an unprecedented...
Read More

In context Recently, the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) stated the geographical influence of Maoists has contracted to only 41 districts in the country, a sharp reduction from 96 such districts in 10 States. Left-wing extremism in India Left-wing extremists, popularly known as Maoists worldwide and as Naxalites/Naxalism in India, has been a major threat...
Read More

In news Recently, the Prime Minister paid tribute to Shaheed Bhagat Singh on his 114th birth anniversary. About Shaheed Bhagat Singh 1907 Born as Bhaganwala on the 27th September 1907, Bhagat Singh grew up in a petty-bourgeois family of Sandhu Jats settled in the Jullundur Doab district of Punjab. He belonged to a generation that...
Read More