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4 - Price Fixing or Fixing Competition?

Bread in Israel*

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

  • In this case of a bread cartel in Israel, the bakeries’ executives agreed to raise the price of sliced dark bread and challah in some stores and to stop competing in each other’s local markets. Overall, the bakeries complied with these agreements. Although the executives admitted to most of the charges, their interpretation of the events differed from those of the Israeli Competition Authority (ICA) and that is where the case becomes interesting.

  • The market power of retail chains caused bakeries to sell sliced dark bread and challah at a loss in order to be able to sell other bread products to retailers. From that normal state of affairs, in response to entry into its home market, one of the bakeries started offering stores a special deal of "3 loaves for 10 shekels NIS (Israeli new shekel)". A few months later, the bakeries entered into an unlawful agreement to stop the "3 for 10" deals (along with raising some other prices).

  • The ICA argued that, prior to the agreement, the bakeries had fiercely competed and the intent of the cartel was to raise prices to supracompetitive levels. The ICA also claimed that, but for the cartel, this level of competition would have continued indefinitely. In contrast, the bakeries claimed the motivation for the agreements was to stop a price war from spreading to other stores. They saw their conduct as intended to raise prices to competitive levels from subcompetitive levels, and that the fierce competition was an aberration that would not have lasted long even without collusion.

  • It is not clear whether the “normal” conduct that the agreement restored was one of genuine competition or of a tacit agreement involving an allocation of geographic markets (which the aggressive conduct preceding the agreement may have violated).

Type
Chapter
Information
Cartels Diagnosed
New Insights on Collusion
, pp. 94 - 130
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2025

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References

Block, M. K., Nold, F. C., and Gregory Sidak, J., (1981) “The Deterrent Effect of Antitrust EnforcementJournal of Political Economy, 89, 429445.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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Israel Democracy Institute (2016) “Statistical Report on Ultra-Orthodox Society in Israel, 2016,” https://en.idi.org.il/haredi/2016/Google Scholar
Mncube, L. (2013) “Strategic Entry Deterrence: Pioneer Foods and the Bread Cartel,” Journal of Competition Law & Economics, 9(3), 637654.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Price Committee (2021) “Summary of the Price Committee Deliberations: Basic Review of Price-led Bread Products,” www.gov.il/BlobFolder/dynamiccollectorresultitem/decision_22072021/he/decision_and_directives_decision_22072021.pdf.Google Scholar
Price Committee (2022) “Summary of the Price Committee Deliberations: Basic Review of Price-Controlled Bread Products,” www.gov.il/BlobFolder/dynamiccollectorresultitem/decision_16052022/he/decision_and_directives_decision_16052022.pdf.Google Scholar
Sutton, J. (1991) Sunk Cost and Market Structure, MIT Press.Google Scholar
The Knesset Research and Information Center (RIC) (2022), “Description and Analysis of the Price Regulation of Bread Products in Israel,” https://fs.knesset.gov.il/globaldocs/MMM/45bc9b89-b781-ec11–8146-00155d0401c3/2_45bc9b89-b781-ec11–8146-00155d0401c3_11_19497.pdf.Google Scholar
Slade, M. (1990) “Strategic Pricing Models and Interpretation of Price-War Data,” European Economic Review, 34, 524537.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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