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11 - Two Cartels in the Supply Chain

Raw Tobacco in Spain*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 December 2024

Joseph E. Harrington Jr.
Affiliation:
University of Pennsylvania
Maarten Pieter Schinkel
Affiliation:
Universiteit van Amsterdam
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Summary

  • The Spanish raw tobacco market offers a story of two cartels that operated simultaneously. The first cartel operated on the seller side of the market. It was set up by the three agricultural unions that managed contract negotiations for the tobacco producers (“the producer representatives’ cartel”). The second cartel, on the buyer side, was formed by the purchasers of raw tobacco (“the processors cartel”).

  • The case study tells a rich story of cartel formation. Government regulation sought to establish fair prices for tobacco producers through a system of production quotas. This led those producers to form a cartel to collectively negotiate with downstream tobacco processors. The processors formed their own cartel to counterbalance the one upstream. We then have regulation inducing one cartel which then inspires a second cartel.

  • The processors’ cartel exemplifies some of the challenges in achieving effective collusion as well as the critical complementary role of monitoring and punishing mechanisms. The cartel was ineffective in its first two years in spite of a high level of market concentration and effective monitoring. Only when an internal compensation mechanism was put in place did firms comply with the collusive outcome.

Type
Chapter
Information
Cartels Diagnosed
New Insights on Collusion
, pp. 317 - 341
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2025

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References

Abrantes-Metz, R. M., Froeb, L. M., Geweke, J., and Taylor, C. T. (2006) “A Variance Screen for Collusion,” International Journal of Industrial Organization, 24(3), 467486.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
AFI, CEOE and Mesa del tabaco (2015) La importancia del sector tabaco en la economía Española, www.mesadeltabaco.es/files/Informe%20mesa%20del%20Tabaco.pdf.Google Scholar
Coelho, G. (2011) “Smoke without Fire – The Spanish Raw Tobacco Cartel Cases,” European Journal of Risk Regulation, 2 (2), 275278.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Commission Decision of October 20, (2004) “Relating to a proceeding under Article 81(1) of the EC Treaty (Case COMP/C.38.238/B.2), 2007/236/EC.”Google Scholar
Dossier Tabaco (1999) “Revista Vida Rural, 15 de octubre. Judgment of the Court (Grand Chamber) of July 19, 2012 (Cases C-628/10 P and C-14/11 P).”Google Scholar
Levenstein, M. and Suslow, V. Y. (2011) “Breaking Up Is Hard to Do: Determinants of Cartel Duration,” The Journal of Law & Economics, 54 (2), 455492.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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