Turf wars are bad for business. The Mob understands that, and businesses do as well. Many industries have carved up the US like the Mob divided turf between families in the 1930s. It doesnāt matter where you look, competition looks fierce on paper but in reality it is often carefully orchestrated. This is nothing new. As early as the 18thCentury, Adam Smith wrote in The Wealth of Nations that, āPeople of the same trade seldom meet together, even for merriment and diversion, but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the public, or in some contrivance to raise prices.ā
When Americans think of businessmen getting together to fix prices, they generally think of Matt Damon in The Informant. The movie tells the story of Mark Whiteacre, the highest-level corporate mole in FBI history, who helped break the Archer Daniel Midland (ADM) lysine price fixing scandal. ADM never met a price it didnāt want to fix. Like a Mob family, they met with competitors to restrict Lysine, an essential amino acid, as well as citric acid and high fructose corn syrup. In a document that came to light in court, an ADM executive wrote, āOur competitors are our friends. Our customers are the enemy.ā
ADM were no outliers, either ā the estimated annual cost of price fixing by cartels is up to $600 billion worldwide. And collusion doesnāt even need to be so explicit. In fact, you donāt need for players to talk to each other at all to get collusion. Many firms that have been caught continue to collude even after they no longer speak to each other. Tacit collusion can lead oligopolistic firms to achieve monopolistic outcomes, leading to reduced output, higher prices, and lower consumer welfare. This is known as the ‘oligopoly problem’. By allowing extreme industry concentration, the government has essentially guaranteed oligopolies can act like monopolies and encouraged outright and tacit collusion.
This unusual phenomenon can be explained by an idea known as game theory, which can be applied to almost any interaction. Everyone has seen A Beautiful Mind, in which John Nash, played by Russell Crowe, has an epiphany at a bar with his friends as they are trying to pick up women.
There is a group of women: one blonde and a few brunettes. All the men want the blonde woman, and one of Nashās friends remarked that Adam Smith would have encouraged competition, and the best strategy would be for them to all go and speak to her. But, Nash points out, this would be a really dumb strategy. If they did that, none of them would get the girl. She would feel pressured and then the others would be offended that they were the second choice. The optimal strategy is for the group to cooperate ā no one talks to the blonde and instead they all talk to the less attractive friends.
Nashās key idea was that among different players, they might all choose tacit cooperation rather than face competition. The solution to the problem of competition is called āNash Equilibriumā.
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