Luke Garrod, Tien-Der Han, James Harvey, Matthew Olczak
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Cartel Damages Claims, Passing-On, and Passing-Back
Firms can mitigate the harm of an input cartel by passing on some of the higher cost to their customers by raising their own prices. Recent damages claims have highlighted that firms may also respond by reducing the prices that are paid to their suppliers of complementary inputs; the firm thereby passes back some harm upstream. To provide guidance for practitioners as to how such effects together affect the division of the harm, we derive the equilibrium ‘passing-on’ and ‘passing-back’ effects in a successive oligopolies model where one of two inputs is cartelised. We show that the passing-back effect is larger when there is greater market power in the complementary input sector. This reduces the passing-on effect. The complementary input suppliers can incur substantial harm, and the harm that is inflicted on the cartel’s direct and/or indirect purchasers can thereby be reduced.
期刊介绍:
New Online Manuscript Submission System The Review of Industrial Organization publishes research papers on all aspects of industrial organization, broadly defined. A main focus is on competition and monopoly, in their many forms and processes and their effects on efficiency, innovation, and social conditions. Topics may range from the internal organization of enterprises to wide international comparisons.
The Review is also increasing its interest in papers on public policies such as antitrust, regulation, deregulation, public enterprise, and privatization. Papers may deal with any economic sectors and any developed economies.
The Review continues its primary interest in ideas that can be verified by econometric evidence, case studies, or other real conditions. But the Review also seeks papers that advance significant theories of industrial organization and policy. Papers using abstract techniques and econometric tests should present the methods and analysis in plain enough English so that non-specialist readers can evaluate the content.
The Review welcomes submissions from any source, and the Editors will make every effort to have papers reviewed quickly and to give prompt decisions. The Editors will also seek to arrange symposia on specific topics, and they are open to proposals for grouped papers. They also welcome shorter notes and commentaries on topics of interest to the profession.
Officially cited as: Rev Ind Organ