Friday, April 25, 2008
Appropriate Antitrust Policy Towards Single-Firm Conduct
Posted by D. Daniel Sokol
A must read paper is Appropriate Antitrust Policy Towards Single-Firm Conduct by Dennis W. Carlton (University of Chicago Graduate School of Business) and Ken Heyer (DOJ).
ABSTRACT: In this article we distinguish between
two types of single-firm conduct. The first, which we call
"extraction," is conduct engaged in by the firm to capture surplus from
what the firm has itself created independent of the conduct's effect on
rivals. The second, which we call "extension," is single firm conduct
that increases the firm's profit by weakening or eliminating the
competitive constraints provided by products of rivals. We propose as a
fundamental antitrust policy towards single-firm conduct the following:
Conduct merely to extract surplus the firm has created independent of
the conduct's effect on rivals should be permitted. Conversely, conduct
that extends the firm's market power by impairing the competitive
constraints imposed by rivals presents a legitimate cause for concern.
We
subscribe strongly to the view that an essential element of appropriate
antitrust policy is to allow a firm to capture as much of the surplus
that, by its own investment, innovation, industry or foresight, the
firm has itself brought into existence. We believe that alternative
approaches to single-firm conduct, including in particular ones aiming
to enhance static efficiency at the possible cost of dynamic efficiency
and ones seeking to maximize overall welfare through more targeted
intervention on a case-by-case basis (not to mention the use of
competition policy to protect competitors rather than consumers)
threaten seriously to impede economic growth and welfare over time.
A
policy that goes further, and which permits all unilateral conduct
regardless of competitive effects (perhaps on grounds that "even more
profit will generate even more innovation") is considered below and
rejected as overly lenient, inconsistent with widely accepted
presumptions in favor of inter-firm competition, and unwise, at least
under the current state of economic knowledge. But we note that this
conclusion is one based on our current economic knowledge and should
remain a topic of ongoing research. It requires an empirical assessment
of the gains from motivating more competition ex ante versus the
subsequent loss of competition ex post.
https://lawprofessors.typepad.com/antitrustprof_blog/2008/04/appropriate-ant.html