1
"A Primer
on Foreclosure. Patrick Rey and
Jean
Tirole. Handbook of Industrial
Organization
(2007)"
A
summarizing exposition
Alexandrina
I. Scorbureanu
Universite
de Cergy-Pontoise
March 13,
2008
1 What is
foreclosure?
In
general, market foreclosure represent market practices that reduce
buyers
access
to a supplier (upstream foreclosure) and/or limit the supplier's access
to a
buyer (downstream foreclosure). Some of the tools used to achieve
market
foreclosure include:
1. a
buyer that purchases a supplier or set up his own production unit so
as to
manufacture the intermediate good internally;
2. a
supplier that signs exclusive-dealing with his buyers;
3. a
manufacturer that makes his good incompatible to complementary
goods
sold by other manufacturers.
There
are two major types of foreclosure: in the _rst type, one of the sec-
tors
(up- or downstream) is monopolized (in this case foreclosure practices
include
exclusive dealing and competition reduction). In the second, neither
sector
is monopolized (foreclosure increases monopolization of one of the sec-
tors).
In this chapter, authors consider two particular cases of the _rst-type
foreclosure:
vertical and horizontal integration.
As
intended in this paper, foreclosure is a _rm's restriction of output in
one
market through the use of market power in another market. It refers to a
dominant
_rm's denial of proper access to an essential good that it produces,
with
the intent of extending monopoly power from that bottleneck segment
of
the market to an adjacent segment (a potentially competitive one). When
the
bottleneck good (for instance infrastructure, software, etc) is used as
an
input
by a potentially competitive downstream industry, or when it is sold
directly
to customers (who use it together with other complementary goods).
Foreclosure
may be complete (refusal to deal, extravagant prices or technical
complementary
integration between goods) or partial. It also may be:
1.
vertical - arises when a _rm controls an essential input for the poten-
tially
competitive industry; this _rm can alter competition by denying
or
limiting access to its input,
2.
horizontal - when the bottleneck good is sold directly to the _nal con-
sumer
and the _rm bundles the potentially competitive good to the
bottleneck
one.
Reassuming,
some instruments used by the forecloser are:
(a)
Integration of the forecloser _rm to other _rms in the comple-
mentary
segment,
(b)
Refusing to cooperate to put competitors in disadvantage (economies
of
scope or scale in the same market),
(c)
Granted exclusivity to a subset of _rms producing selected goods,
(d)
Second-degree price discrimination (by loyalty programs to all or
rebates
based on the rate of growth of purchases) and third-degree
price
discrimination (charging di_erent cost-adjusted prices to dif-
ferent
customers), as well as "mixed bundling" (conditional dis-
counts
on complementary goods).
A
number of solutions have been considered, namely:
2
(a)
structural policies such as divestitures and line of business restric-
tions
(but with high transaction costs) that may allow the joint
ownership
by all competitors of an essential facility;
(b)
access price control when antitrust authorities compare the price
of
access with some measure of its cost (di_cult to measure em-
pirically
marginal costs),
(c)
access quantity control within an exclusivity contract, some amount
of
each operator's capacity must be allocated to new entrants,
(d)
price linkage between access charges, for instance the e_cient
component
pricing rule that links the integrated monopolist's ac-
cess
and retail prices, to avoid margin squeezes,
(e)
common carrier policies that means the turning of vertical struc-
ture
of the industry upside down (referred to the semantic meaning
of
naming "upstream" and "downstream" operators),
(f)
disclosure requirements the requirement for contracts of interme-
diary
goods to be made public for the sake of transparency.
2 Vertical
foreclosure
The
"leverage" concept argued that there is a single source of monopoly
pro_t,
and that a bottleneck monopolist can earn the entire monopoly
pro_t
without extending its market power to related segments (vertical
integration
cannot increase pro_tability of merging _rms). For exam-
ple,
a bottleneck holder faces a commitment problem similar to that of
a
durable-good monopolist (see Coase's durable good analysis): once
it
has contracted with a downstream _rm for access to its facility, it
is
tempted to o_er access to other _rms as well (even if their competi-
tion
to the other _rm will reduce monopolist's pro_ts). Nevertheless,
the
positioning (downstream or upstream) of the _rm is not aleatory
and
it has some important consequences on the monopolist's power. A
comparison
between exclusive contracts and commitment problem lead
us to
two major problems:
3
(a)
upstream bottleneck's pro_t is smaller, the larger the number of
downstream
_rms, and
(b)
for a given number of downstream _rms, the upstream pro_t is
smaller,
the more substitutable the downstream units.
The
study of this problems lead the authors to derivate three major
policy
implications:
(a)
it is important whether the more competitive of two complemen-
tary
sectors lies upstream or downstream (prices are lower if the
bottleneck
owner lies upstream),
(b)
non-discrimination laws may have a perverse e_ect of restoring the
monopoly
power (when an upstream bottleneck practices foreclo-
sure
by discrimination among competitors, o_ering to all com-
petitors
the same commercial conditions forces bottleneck to sell
further
units at the same high price, that helps it to commit),
(c)
ECPR (e_cient component pricing rule) has scarce e_ect on un-
regulated
markets. It is a partial rule that provides a link between
access
and _nal prices (the higher the _nal price, the higher the
access
price can be).
A
simple example of (1 monopoly X 2 retailers) in a two-stage game
framework
is built and we are reformulating the main results. Provided
that
the vertical structure of industry's monopoly output is formed by:
Qm =
argmax f(P(q) c)qg
pm =
P(Qm)
_m =
(pm c)Qm = [P(Qm)]2 cQm:
(1)
The
interaction between _rms is described in the following: PLAYER STAGE I
STAGE II
EQUILIBRIUM
U MC
= c; (q1(T1)); (q2(T2))
D1
T1(_) MC = 0
Rev1
= q1P(q1 + q2)
D2
T2(_) MC = 0
Rev2
= q2P(q1 + q2)
Consumer
q = D(p); p = P(q)
Sub-cases
related to observability hypothesis:
(a)
Commitment, observability, credibility. Both tari_s T1; T2 o_ered
by U
are observed by both D1 and D2.U exerts his full market
power
such as to extract all Di's pro_t. Nevertheless, contract
may
be secret or can be privately renegotiated. If we hav
"A Primer
on Foreclosure. Patrick Rey and
Jean
Tirole. Handbook of Industrial
Organization
(2007)"
A
summarizing exposition
Alexandrina
I. Scorbureanu
Universite
de Cergy-Pontoise
March 13,
2008
1 What is
foreclosure?
In
general, market foreclosure represent market practices that reduce
buyers
access
to a supplier (upstream foreclosure) and/or limit the supplier's access
to a
buyer (downstream foreclosure). Some of the tools used to achieve
market
foreclosure include:
1. a
buyer that purchases a supplier or set up his own production unit so
as to
manufacture the intermediate good internally;
2. a
supplier that signs exclusive-dealing with his buyers;
3. a
manufacturer that makes his good incompatible to complementary
goods
sold by other manufacturers.
There
are two major types of foreclosure: in the _rst type, one of the sec-
tors
(up- or downstream) is monopolized (in this case foreclosure practices
include
exclusive dealing and competition reduction). In the second, neither
sector
is monopolized (foreclosure increases monopolization of one of the sec-
tors).
In this chapter, authors consider two particular cases of the _rst-type
foreclosure:
vertical and horizontal integration.
As
intended in this paper, foreclosure is a _rm's restriction of output in
one
market through the use of market power in another market. It refers to a
dominant
_rm's denial of proper access to an essential good that it produces,
with
the intent of extending monopoly power from that bottleneck segment
of
the market to an adjacent segment (a potentially competitive one). When
the
bottleneck good (for instance infrastructure, software, etc) is used as
an
input
by a potentially competitive downstream industry, or when it is sold
directly
to customers (who use it together with other complementary goods).
Foreclosure
may be complete (refusal to deal, extravagant prices or technical
complementary
integration between goods) or partial. It also may be:
1.
vertical - arises when a _rm controls an essential input for the poten-
tially
competitive industry; this _rm can alter competition by denying
or
limiting access to its input,
2.
horizontal - when the bottleneck good is sold directly to the _nal con-
sumer
and the _rm bundles the potentially competitive good to the
bottleneck
one.
Reassuming,
some instruments used by the forecloser are:
(a)
Integration of the forecloser _rm to other _rms in the comple-
mentary
segment,
(b)
Refusing to cooperate to put competitors in disadvantage (economies
of
scope or scale in the same market),
(c)
Granted exclusivity to a subset of _rms producing selected goods,
(d)
Second-degree price discrimination (by loyalty programs to all or
rebates
based on the rate of growth of purchases) and third-degree
price
discrimination (charging di_erent cost-adjusted prices to dif-
ferent
customers), as well as "mixed bundling" (conditional dis-
counts
on complementary goods).
A
number of solutions have been considered, namely:
2
(a)
structural policies such as divestitures and line of business restric-
tions
(but with high transaction costs) that may allow the joint
ownership
by all competitors of an essential facility;
(b)
access price control when antitrust authorities compare the price
of
access with some measure of its cost (di_cult to measure em-
pirically
marginal costs),
(c)
access quantity control within an exclusivity contract, some amount
of
each operator's capacity must be allocated to new entrants,
(d)
price linkage between access charges, for instance the e_cient
component
pricing rule that links the integrated monopolist's ac-
cess
and retail prices, to avoid margin squeezes,
(e)
common carrier policies that means the turning of vertical struc-
ture
of the industry upside down (referred to the semantic meaning
of
naming "upstream" and "downstream" operators),
(f)
disclosure requirements the requirement for contracts of interme-
diary
goods to be made public for the sake of transparency.
2 Vertical
foreclosure
The
"leverage" concept argued that there is a single source of monopoly
pro_t,
and that a bottleneck monopolist can earn the entire monopoly
pro_t
without extending its market power to related segments (vertical
integration
cannot increase pro_tability of merging _rms). For exam-
ple,
a bottleneck holder faces a commitment problem similar to that of
a
durable-good monopolist (see Coase's durable good analysis): once
it
has contracted with a downstream _rm for access to its facility, it
is
tempted to o_er access to other _rms as well (even if their competi-
tion
to the other _rm will reduce monopolist's pro_ts). Nevertheless,
the
positioning (downstream or upstream) of the _rm is not aleatory
and
it has some important consequences on the monopolist's power. A
comparison
between exclusive contracts and commitment problem lead
us to
two major problems:
3
(a)
upstream bottleneck's pro_t is smaller, the larger the number of
downstream
_rms, and
(b)
for a given number of downstream _rms, the upstream pro_t is
smaller,
the more substitutable the downstream units.
The
study of this problems lead the authors to derivate three major
policy
implications:
(a)
it is important whether the more competitive of two complemen-
tary
sectors lies upstream or downstream (prices are lower if the
bottleneck
owner lies upstream),
(b)
non-discrimination laws may have a perverse e_ect of restoring the
monopoly
power (when an upstream bottleneck practices foreclo-
sure
by discrimination among competitors, o_ering to all com-
petitors
the same commercial conditions forces bottleneck to sell
further
units at the same high price, that helps it to commit),
(c)
ECPR (e_cient component pricing rule) has scarce e_ect on un-
regulated
markets. It is a partial rule that provides a link between
access
and _nal prices (the higher the _nal price, the higher the
access
price can be).
A
simple example of (1 monopoly X 2 retailers) in a two-stage game
framework
is built and we are reformulating the main results. Provided
that
the vertical structure of industry's monopoly output is formed by:
Qm =
argmax f(P(q) c)qg
pm =
P(Qm)
_m =
(pm c)Qm = [P(Qm)]2 cQm:
(1)
The
interaction between _rms is described in the following: PLAYER STAGE I
STAGE II
EQUILIBRIUM
U MC
= c; (q1(T1)); (q2(T2))
D1
T1(_) MC = 0
Rev1
= q1P(q1 + q2)
D2
T2(_) MC = 0
Rev2
= q2P(q1 + q2)
Consumer
q = D(p); p = P(q)
Sub-cases
related to observability hypothesis:
(a)
Commitment, observability, credibility. Both tari_s T1; T2 o_ered
by U
are observed by both D1 and D2.U exerts his full market
power
such as to extract all Di's pro_t. Nevertheless, contract
may
be secret or can be privately renegotiated. If we have the
following
situation for instance:
q2 =
Qm
2 ;
T2 = pmQm
2
q1 =
argmaxq fq [P(Qm=2 + q) c]g = RCournot > Qm=2
with
: P0 < 0;
(2)
Therefore
there is an incentive to secretly contract between U and
D1.
(b)
Secret contracts At the _rst stage U o_ers secret contracts to each
Di.
The equilibrium is characterized by the Cournot quantities,
prices
and pro_ts:
q1 =
argmaxq f[P(q + q2) c] qg = RCournot(q2); (8)q
q1 =
q2 = qCournot = RCournot(qCournot) > Qm=2
p1 =
p2 = pCournot = P(2qCournot) < pm
_U =
(pCournot c)2qCournot = 2_Cournot < _m
_D1 =
_D2 = 0:
(3)
This
result puts emphasis on the commitment problem faced by
the
monopoly supplier (a credibility problem prevents him to gain
the
monopoly outcome). In the case there are n downstream com-
petitors,
the symmetric passive conjecture equilibrium is given by
q =
RCournot((n 1)q), where q is output per downstream _rm.
The
commitment problem becomes more severe, the larger the
number
of downstream _rms (increasing competition). Also, the
same
result is reached if we allow for downstream product di_eren-
tiation.
The retail prices are di_erent, respectively p1 = P1(q1; q2)
and
p2 = P2(q1; q2) and the equilibrium of the overall game is
still
a Cournot equilibrium (in which downstream _rms face a
marginal
cost c). The result is that the ratio of Cournot industry
pro_t
over monopoly pro_t increases with the degree of di_eren-
tiation
and the attractiveness of monopoly power is stronger the
more
substitutable are retail products. In this situation, foreclo-
sure
aims to reestablish monopoly power (U has an incentive to
alter
downstream market structure using techniques as: exclusive
dealing,
integration with downstream _rms, price oor).
The
empirical experimental evidence that tests the foreclosure the-
ory
yield that non-integration with public o_ers and vertical inte-
gration
lead the monopoly outcome whereas non-integration with
secret
o_ers result in Cournot outcome. Others _nd only partial
support
for this theory (see Martin et al.2001). The _eld studies
results
do not show relevant evidence of foreclosure e_ects (impact
of
vertical mergers on downstream rivals and end users) but claim
that
vertical integration may help solving commitment problems
of
upstream monopolies. Three are the tested hypotheses:
i.
retail _rms (rivals) receive less input from or pay a higher
price
to the upstream monopolist _rm U;
ii.
if D2 is publicly traded, then its stock price gets lower when
merger
U D1 is announced (if U does not extract all the
rent
from downstream units);
iii.
_nal customers su_er from a merger (decrease in welfare is
measured
by a decrease in stock price or an increase in future
price
of _nal good).
6
2.1
Vertical foreclosure: Policy implications
The
Coasian pricing problem is more likely to arise when monopo-
list
bottleneck market is situated upstream. From the consumer or
total
welfare perspective it is preferable to put the more competitive
sector
downstream and let consumers deal directly to the competing
operators.
Additionally, non-discrimination laws aim to protect con-
sumers
from abuses of dominant position. In the context just described
above,
these non-discrimination laws have adverse e_ects on all con-
sumers
and total welfare, because they eliminate opportunistic behav-
ior
of U and allow it to fully exercise its monopoly power. If U of-
fers
the non-discriminatory two-part tari_ T(qi) = _m + cqi (wholesale
price=marginal
cost and _xed fee=monopoly pro_t), an equilibrium
will
exist if the coordination between U D1D2 exists. The
compet-
itive
sector will gain zero-pro_ts and U will gain the monopoly pro_t.
If U
does not consider the impact of a decrease in output on the down-
stream
_rms pro_ts (and it has a quasi-concave objective function,
T(q)
= wq and maximizes _U = (w(Q) c)Q), the result leads to a
choice
of Q < Qm.
2.2
Restore of monopoly power: vertical integra-
tion
and exclusive dealing
Vertical
integration leads to the exclusion of the non-integrated retail
_rm,
given that there is no other potential supplier for D2. The in-
troduction
of an alternative supplier ^U does not a_ect _nal prices and
quantities
or the structure of the production, but it produces a change
in
the pro_t sharing among U and retailers. We re-write the two-stages
game
with two alternative suppliers U and ^U : PLAYER STAGE I STAGE II
EQUILIBRIUM
U UC
= c; q1(T1); q2(T2)
^U
UC =
^c > c; q1( ^ T1); q2( ^ T2)
D1
T1; ^ T1 MC = 0
Rev1
= q1P(q1 + q2)
D2
T2; ^ T2 MC = 0
Rev2
= q2P(q1 + q2)
Consumer
q = D(p); p = P(q)
From
the _rst two lines of the game above we observe that U is more
e_cient
than ^U , therefore it will potentially supply both D1 and D2,
although
under more favorable conditions for the retailers due to the
competition
with ^U 1.
If U
and D1 integrate, the result leads to a reduction in the supply for
D2
which faces a higher opportunity cost (^c > c):D2 will buy from ^U
and
the equilibrium quantities correspond to the asymmetric Cournot
duopoly:
q1 =
RCournot(qCournot
2 )
q2 =
RCournot(qCournot
1 ) _
argmaxq f(P(q + q1) ^c)qg
with
: 1 < R0Cournot(q) < 0
RCo^urnot(q)
< RCournot(q)
implying
: 2qCournot < qCournot
1 +
qCournot
2
_U+D1
= _Cournot
1 +
(^c c)qCournot
2
_D2 =
_Cournot
2
equil
: c1 = c < c2 = ^c;
(4)
Thus
D2 obtains lower pro_ts than _U+D1 through integration, that
1more
precisely, U will supply both _rms with the same qCournot but for the
payment
_Cournot
maxq
e the
following
situation for instance:
q2 =
Qm
2 ;
T2 = pmQm
2
q1 =
argmaxq fq [P(Qm=2 + q) c]g = RCournot > Qm=2
with
: P0 < 0;
(2)
Therefore
there is an incentive to secretly contract between U and
D1.
(b)
Secret contracts At the _rst stage U o_ers secret contracts to each
Di.
The equilibrium is characterized by the Cournot quantities,
prices
and pro_ts:
q1 =
argmaxq f[P(q + q2) c] qg = RCournot(q2); (8)q
q1 =
q2 = qCournot = RCournot(qCournot) > Qm=2
p1 =
p2 = pCournot = P(2qCournot) < pm
_U =
(pCournot c)2qCournot = 2_Cournot < _m
_D1 =
_D2 = 0:
(3)
This
result puts emphasis on the commitment problem faced by
the
monopoly supplier (a credibility problem prevents him to gain
the
monopoly outcome). In the case there are n downstream com-
petitors,
the symmetric passive conjecture equilibrium is given by
q =
RCournot((n 1)q), where q is output per downstream _rm.
The
commitment problem becomes more severe, the larger the
number
of downstream _rms (increasing competition). Also, the
same
result is reached if we allow for downstream product di_eren-
tiation.
The retail prices are di_erent, respectively p1 = P1(q1; q2)
and
p2 = P2(q1; q2) and the equilibrium of the overall game is
still
a Cournot equilibrium (in which downstream _rms face a
marginal
cost c). The result is that the ratio of Cournot industry
pro_t
over monopoly pro_t increases with the degree of di_eren-
tiation
and the attractiveness of monopoly power is stronger the
more
substitutable are retail products. In this situation, foreclo-
sure
aims to reestablish monopoly power (U has an incentive to
alter
downstream market structure using techniques as: exclusive
dealing,
integration with downstream _rms, price oor).
The
empirical experimental evidence that tests the foreclosure the-
ory
yield that non-integration with public o_ers and vertical inte-
gration
lead the monopoly outcome whereas non-integration with
secret
o_ers result in Cournot outcome. Others _nd only partial
support
for this theory (see Martin et al.2001). The _eld studies
results
do not show relevant evidence of foreclosure e_ects (impact
of
vertical mergers on downstream rivals and end users) but claim
that
vertical integration may help solving commitment problems
of
upstream monopolies. Three are the tested hypotheses:
i.
retail _rms (rivals) receive less input from or pay a higher
price
to the upstream monopolist _rm U;
ii.
if D2 is publicly traded, then its stock price gets lower when
merger
U D1 is announced (if U does not extract all the
rent
from downstream units);
iii.
_nal customers su_er from a merger (decrease in welfare is
measured
by a decrease in stock price or an increase in future
price
of _nal good).
6
2.1
Vertical foreclosure: Policy implications
The
Coasian pricing problem is more likely to arise when monopo-
list
bottleneck market is situated upstream. From the consumer or
total
welfare perspective it is preferable to put the more competitive
sector
downstream and let consumers deal directly to the competing
operators.
Additionally, non-discrimination laws aim to protect con-
sumers
from abuses of dominant position. In the context just described
above,
these non-discrimination laws have adverse e_ects on all con-
sumers
and total welfare, because they eliminate opportunistic behav-
ior
of U and allow it to fully exercise its monopoly power. If U of-
fers
the non-discriminatory two-part tari_ T(qi) = _m + cqi (wholesale
price=marginal
cost and _xed fee=monopoly pro_t), an equilibrium
will
exist if the coordination between U D1D2 exists. The
compet-
itive
sector will gain zero-pro_ts and U will gain the monopoly pro_t.
If U
does not consider the impact of a decrease in output on the down-
stream
_rms pro_ts (and it has a quasi-concave objective function,
T(q)
= wq and maximizes _U = (w(Q) c)Q), the result leads to a
choice
of Q < Qm.
2.2
Restore of monopoly power: vertical integra-
tion
and exclusive dealing
Vertical
integration leads to the exclusion of the non-integrated retail
_rm,
given that there is no other potential supplier for D2. The in-
troduction
of an alternative supplier ^U does not a_ect _nal prices and
quantities
or the structure of the production, but it produces a change
in
the pro_t sharing among U and retailers. We re-write the two-stages
game
with two alternative suppliers U and ^U : PLAYER STAGE I STAGE II
EQUILIBRIUM
U UC
= c; q1(T1); q2(T2)
^U
UC =
^c > c; q1( ^ T1); q2( ^ T2)
D1
T1; ^ T1 MC = 0
Rev1
= q1P(q1 + q2)
D2
T2; ^ T2 MC = 0
Rev2
= q2P(q1 + q2)
Consumer
q = D(p); p = P(q)
From
the _rst two lines of the game above we observe that U is more
e_cient
than ^U , therefore it will potentially supply both D1 and D2,
although
under more favorable conditions for the retailers due to the
competition
with ^U 1.
If U
and D1 integrate, the result leads to a reduction in the supply for
D2
which faces a higher opportunity cost (^c > c):D2 will buy from ^U
and
the equilibrium quantities correspond to the asymmetric Cournot
duopoly:
q1 =
RCournot(qCournot
2 )
q2 =
RCournot(qCournot
1 ) _
argmaxq f(P(q + q1) ^c)qg
with
: 1 < R0Cournot(q) < 0
RCo^urnot(q)
< RCournot(q)
implying
: 2qCournot < qCournot
1 +
qCournot
2
_U+D1
= _Cournot
1 +
(^c c)qCournot
2
_D2 =
_Cournot
2
equil
: c1 = c < c2 = ^c;
(4)
Thus
D2 obtains lower pro_ts than _U+D1 through integration, that
1more
precisely, U will supply both _rms with the same qCournot but for the
payment
_Cournot
maxq
1
(P(q
+ qCournot) ^c)q
_
since
each retailer can also buy from ^U at some
price
^p > ^c.
proves
to bene_t integrated _rms. Vertical integration maintains pro-
duction
e_ciency while it lowers consumer surplus and total welfare
(and
the higher the cost of bypassing the bottleneck monopolist, the
larger
the negative impacts on consumers and welfare). Vertical inte-
gration
is more pro_table if ^c is higher.
Some
policy solutions came along to limit the negative impact on wel-
fare
of the vertical integration leading to foreclosure. With or without
vertical
integration it is still desirable to ensure that the most com-
petitive
sector faces _nal consumers. In the vertical integration case
with
no bypass, it technically does not matter if the monopolist sector
is
upstream or downstream, but by de_nition, there is no incentive to
integrate
if the monopolist is situated downstream (in which case it
does
not exist a commitment problem). In the case with possible by-
pass,
the position of monopolist does matter (if it is downstream, the
less
e_cient alternative supplier cannot be shut down and this results
in
productive ine_ciency; there is also an indi_erence of U whether to
integrate
with D1 or not).
Assuming
the vertical integration between the upstream monopoly and
the
downstream retailer, the equilibrium outcome without ECPR also
satis_es
ECPR (it does not impose constraints on foreclosure, therefore
it is
expected to perform a function it was not designed for). Under
the
hypothesis of a single monopolist that integrates with D1, o_ering
a
linear ECPR-compatible access price w2 < pm 0 = pm to D2. The
revenue
of _rm D2 that buys q2 intermediary units and transforms them
into
a _nal good is: [P(Qm + q2) w2] q2 < [P(Qm) w2] q2 =
0. A
negative
pro_t for D2 imposes a situation of no-viable activity for this
retailer,
as the authors state.
In
the exclusive dealing case vertical integration may also yield social
bene_ts
(not only social costs). These can be evaluated by investi-
gating
alternative strategies available to foreclosure (such as exclusive
dealing
or exclusive supply contracts 2) and their relative costs. An
exclusive
dealing may represent a perfect substitute for vertical inte-
2see
P.Rey and J.Tirole. A primer on Foreclosure. IO Handbook 2007. p.2176
gration
(given that if vertical integration is prohibited, by an exclusive
agreement
between U D1, U commits himself not to sell to D2). That
is to
say that a policy that prohibits vertical integration but allows for
exclusionary
agreements (that may become socially less desirable be-
cause
its rigid constraints), is of no use. Exclusive dealing is pro_table
in a
context where we consider the alternative supplier ^U does not
impose
any competitive constraint and he is less e_cient than U that
gets
the monopoly pro_t with exclusive dealing (and the Cournot pro_t
in
other case). Instead, by auctioning an exclusive deal, U can earn
_Excl
Cournot(^c)
= _Cournot
1
maxq
n
[P(qCournot
1
(^c) + q) ^c]q
o
= (c
^c)q.
O_ering
exclusivity or not yield zero pro_t when the second supplier is
equally
e_cient (c = ^c), and are more pro_table when ^U is less e_cient
c
< ^c. If there is no alternative supplier but the retailers produce a
di_erentiated
good, the integrated _rm UD1 may still want to supply
D2
whereas an exclusive agreement with D1 would lead to the exclusion
of D2
(ine_ciency and reduction in welfare).
To
conclude, exclusive dealing yields less pro_t to U than vertical inte-
gration.
Secondly, the prohibition of vertical integration without norms
on
exclusive dealing leads to a socially less desirable outcome (it reduces
the
choice available to _nal consumers, by excluding rivals). Further
subjects
to be developed are indicated by the authors, namely:
(a)
private incentives to support not-exclusivity. Independent users of
intermediate
goods may diminish investments that approach them
to
the upstream bottleneck, or to a competitive-technology sector
(this
choice is made when they anticipate the monopolist's fore-
closure,
because of an existing vertical integration). Competition
protects
investment in situations in which it is di_cult to write a
long-term
e_cient contract. Therefore, an monopolist that has to
lower
speci_c investments, does not want to compete in the future
with
a favored downstream user;
(b)
the Coasian approach (Cestone and White 2003) that is applied
beyond
industrial markets, for instance to intermediary's owner-
ship
of equity;
(c)
contract with externalities (Segal 1999) situations in which a prin-
cipal
contracts with multiple agents and one of the contracts has
externalities
on other agents. General results are obtained on the
type
of trade between the principal and agents (secret contracts
and
public commitments) as a function of the type of externalities;
(d)
alternative conjectures such as the passive conjecture from the
Cournot
situation in which the monopolist produces to order.
There
is a strategic interdependence between for instance U and
D1,
when the contract signed with D1 a_ects conditions that U
would
like to o_er to D2 (that is the competitor of D1). This
interdependence
creates problems like non-concavity (that make
disappear
pure-strategy with passive beliefs 3.);
(e)
bidding games that are situations in which downstream rival retail-
ers
bid (causing externalities on each other) for the input supplied
by
the upstream monopolist (that chooses how much to supply,
eventually).
On the contrary, if retailers determine quantities and
o_ers
are public, they can protect against opportunistic behavior
of
the rival by choosing a exible contract (adapt purchases to the
terms
in rival's contracts).
3
Horizontal foreclosure
It
refers to a situation in which a _rm U is present in two _nal markets
A
(monopoly segment for _rm U) and B (the competitive segment
for
_rm U). In this context it could appear a foreclosure situation
if U
forecloses competitors in market B to link the bottleneck good
A to
its own o_er on B (case invoked especially when A and B are
complements).
Nevertheless, this situation is not pro_table for the _rm
U
given that if it decides to foreclose rivals and become monopolist on
both
markets (by bundling products A and B) it obtains a lower pro_t
than
in the situation in which it keeps unbundling and _x a price such
3because
the gain from simultaneously changing contracts o_ered to D1 and D2 may
exceed
total gains from modi_cation of just one contract.
11
as to
extract the pro_t of rivals on market B. If the _rm is integrated
and
present on the two markets, it will be more likely to invest in B
(given
that any increase in competition for B stimulates consumers to
pay
for the monopolized product A). The same situation discourages
rivals
to invest in B.
If
the products are relatively independent, this logic does not hold any
more
(as pointed out by the Chicago School and criticized by the paper
of
Whinston (1990)). A demonstration is provided by considering that
in
the B market there is a potential entrant E and _rm U must choose
if
bundle or not the two products A and B. the results is that bundling
allows
U to discourage E to enter the market. Nevertheless, if entry
occurs,
U has no more incentive to bundle the two goods (the use of
bundling
or tying as an entry barrier, relies on a strong commitment,
eventually
obtainable through technological choices, for example, by
making
A incompatible with with competitive B versions). If there is
no
independence between A and B, the exit of competitors from market
B
damages to good A. To conclude, bundling intensi_es competition
(we
focus on compatibility choices of competing _rms that each o_er
all
components of a system, example of endogenous switch of costs).
When
_rms opt for compatibility, the market-by-market competition
prevails,
where
_rms compete separately for each component.
Furthermore,
we focus on the entry decisions if we consider risky projects
on
the two markets (authors consider now that U is a monopoly on both
A and
B perfect complementary markets). An investment in research
and
development will allow _rm E to enter the market. If it succeeds
to
enter both markets it will replace U and will get all the gain on
both
markets, whereas if E enters only one market, its gain depends
on
the bundling decision of U (since goods are complementary) and E
becomes
competitor for U. By considering the probability of success
of E,
the authors derive a conclusion on the riskiness of entry projects
for E
(in the absence of risk bundling decision of U is irrelevant).
In
the case of economies of scale and scope two periods decisions for
the
two _rms are analyzed for the two markets A and B. The resulting
12
conclusion
is that if bundling is not made, the entrance on market A
of E
is pro_table, whereas entry on market B is pro_table only if it
generates
pro_ts in both periods. Also, entry is pro_table if E enters
market
B in period 2. By bundling the two goods together, U deters
the
entrance of E and allows U to maintain a monopoly pro_t over all
the
two periods.
Furthermore
it is interesting to observe how investments in research and
development
of adjacent market B in order to discourage competitive
e_orts
by rival producers. According to a Chicago School argument,
_rm U
has still incentive to innovate (even if it is forced, for the sake
of
innovation competition, to share the resulting intellectual property
with
some E) because improvements in the adjacent market bene_ts
the
dominant _rms core activity. With antitrust intervention there
has
been proved that no reinforcing of innovation can be made, and
moreover,
it would damage to the intellectual property law (trade-o_
between
the bene_ts of competition and the protection of innovation
from
direct imitation). Competition in the B market brings product va-
riety
and lower costs and prices. Therefore, it augments the value of the
bottleneck
good and U's pro_t when the two goods are complementary
and
not tied. Bundling and foreclosure must have e_ciency-objectives
and
predatory intents. Motivations for bundling may be not related to
competition
(distribution and compatibility cost savings, liability and
reputation,
market segmentation and protection of intellectual prop-
erty,
etc) therefore bundling may be used as a reasonable act by the
_rms.
4
Exclusive customer contracts and e_-
ciency
arguments
Firms
may use their market power (through long term exclusive ar-
rangements)
in order to protect their position in the same market,
even
in absence of interaction with related markets. Firms could "lock"
users
through exclusive contracts (probably with the objective to ex-
tract
some of the entrant's technological advantage). There are several
types
of exclusionary techniques:
(a)
penalty for breach agreements
(b)
renegotiation they have an exclusionary impact given that they
rely on
the assumption that U and D _rm cannot renegotiate their
contract,
once the entrant E has made an o_er. From the welfare
point
of view, exclusivity leads to over-investment relative to what
would
be socially desirable, whenever some conditions are meet in
terms
of c.d.f. of E's cost ([1 ^ F(_c)](_cc))+
R _c
c d ^
F(^c) < I < _cc:
Exclusivity
contracts in which downstream customers commit to
purchase
from an upstream supplier, may deter investments by
competing
upstream suppliers.
In
the rent extraction perspective, penalties for breach agreements are
used
to force a more e_cient entrant to reduce its price. In the entry-
deterrence
theory, penalties for breach arise a free-riding problem of
customers,
when the entrant faces a large _xed cost for which it needs
a
large market in order to become a real competitor.
E_ciency
arguments for vertical foreclosure are:
(a)
forbearance as a reward to investment or innovation
(b)
free-riding by downstream units on the marketing expenses
(c)
excessive entry
(d) monitoring
bene_ts of vertical integration
(e)
costly divestitures
(f)
costly expansion of capacity or costs incurred in order to provide
access
(g)
fear of being associated with inferior downstream partners that
could
damage the _rms's reputation
(h)
universal service
E_ciency
arguments for tying:
14
(a)
preventing ine_cient substitution
(b)
metering
(c)
signaling quality
5
Conclusion
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