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Introduction to the Cartels System

June 15, 2019
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This article is written by Anushka Ojha, a third-year student of ICFAI University, Dehradun. In this article, she discusses the Indian law on the cartel, types of the cartel, characteristics of the cartel, why do cartels fail, tools for discovering the cartel.

Concept and meaning of Cartels

In the case of Union of India v. Hindustan Development Corporation, the cartel was an association of producers who, by mutual agreement, attempted to control the production, sale and prices of the product to obtain a monopoly in a particular sector or commodity. This amounts to an unfair commercial practice that is not in the public interest.

The intention to acquire monopoly power may be expressed as soon as such a cartel is formed by some of the producers. Determining whether such an agreement unduly restricts trade depends on the nature of the agreement and the circumstances that led to the inference that the parties intended to limit trade and monopolise it.

Section 2 (c) of the Competition Act 2002 defines cartels as

“An association of producers, vendors, distributors, merchants or service providers who, by agreement, limit, control or attempt to control the production, distribution, sale or price of or trade in goods or the supply of services. “

In the case of Union of India v. Hindustan Development Corporation, the cartel was an association of producers which, by mutual agreement, attempted to control the production, sale and prices of the product to obtain a monopoly in a particular sector or product.

This amounts to an unfair commercial practice that is not in the public interest. The intention to acquire monopoly power may be expressed as soon as such a cartel is formed by some of the producers. Determining whether such an agreement unduly restricts trade depends on the nature of the agreement and the circumstances that lead to the inference that the parties intended to restrict trade and monopolise it.

Paragraph 2 (c) of the Competition Act 2002 defines cartels:

“An association of producers, vendors, distributors, merchants or service providers who, by agreement, limit, control or attempt to control the production, distribution, sale or price of or trade in goods or the supply of services.

The three essentials of the cartel are as follows.

The antithesis of competition is the monopoly, which usually happens when a few producers, instead of competing, meet and form an association or cartel. The monopoly created by the cartels is as such, not conducive to progress. It stunts growth and hampers the improvement of the standard of living of the population.

Cartels are the most egregious violations of competition law and are widely regarded as the most detrimental anti-competitive behaviour on the market today and are banned in most countries. The agreements are part of the agreements considered to have a significant adverse effect on competition. Cartels can occur in almost any sector and may involve goods and services at the manufacturing, distribution and retail levels.

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Indian law on Cartel

Cartels: Presumed as dangerous

Agreements between undertakings engaged in the trading of goods or the provision of identical or similar services (commonly referred to as horizontal agreements), including cartels, of four types specified in the law, are presumed to have a significant adverse effect on competition and are therefore anti-competitive and anti-competitive empty.

However, the horizontal agreements of the four types referred to above in the previous paragraphs, concluded through joint ventures, are not expected to have a material adverse effect on competition and are excluded from the above-mentioned provisions of section 3 of the Competition Act if they increase the efficiency of the production, supply, distribution, storage, acquisition or control of goods or the provision of services. Agreements other than those referred to in section 3 (3) of the Competition Act, includes as follows.

Leniency scheme

Section 46 of the Competition Act empowers the Commission to grant leniency by imposing a lesser penalty on a member of the cartel who provides complete, truthful and essential information about the agreement. The system is designed to encourage members to participate in the detection and search of agreements.

This system is based on the principle that the prosecution of cartels requires evidence provided by a member of the cartel. Similar leniency systems have proved very useful for competition authorities in foreign jurisdictions to successfully prosecute cartels.

The Commission has notified the 2009 Regulation of the Indian Competition Commission (minimum penalty) setting the process, procedure and method of granting leniency to members of the cartel that fall within the scope of the cartel and who become useful to the Commission and helped to eliminate the so-called cartels.

Why do Cartels fail?

Cartels are challenging to maintain because some economists believe that price-fixing cartels are inherently unstable, and at some point, they inevitably come under pressure and collapse. The problem is that cartel members will be tempted to cheat their agreement to limit production. By producing more output than she has agreed to produce.

There are several potential sources of instability for pricing arrangements.

Tools for discovering Cartel

Whistleblowing – Competition authorities face difficulties in gathering evidence, as cartel activities take place in closed rooms and conference rooms. It’s a place where a whistleblower is important. Competition authorities around the world are persuading whistleblowers to approach them to give them information about companies that are coming together to form a cartel. However, certain conditions are attached, such that the whistleblower must not be involved in the illegal activity of the cartel.

Cases on Cartel

DG vs. Modi Alkali and Chemicals Limited

A complaint has been received that some of the largest companies in northern India have formed a cartel to raise prices for their products. The prices of chlorine gas and hydrochloric acid increased by 277% and 200% respectively in six and four months in 1992. This resulted in an agreement between the parties to create an artificial shortage in order to increase the prices of their products. Since raw material prices, namely sodium chloride and electricity, remained virtually unchanged, this would be a fictional crisis created to take advantage of the market and increase the prices of their products.

Price Parallelism vs. Price Fixing

In Alkali & Chemical Corporation of India Ltd. And Bayer India Ltd, the companies were engaged in the manufacture and sale of rubber chemicals and held a dominant share of the total market for these products. Charges were laid against them, raising them to identical prices five or six times on or about the same date. However, there was no direct evidence available behind the price increase.

Conclusion and suggestions

For detecting a cartel, the competition authority should have some extraordinary power, such as:

 

 

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