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Maintaining Privacy in Cartels

Author(s)
Sugaya, Takuo; Wolitzky, Alexander Greenberg
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Abstract
It is conventional wisdom that transparency in cartels—monitoring of competitors’ prices, sales, and profits—facilitates collusion. However, in several recent cases cartels have instead worked to preserve the privacy of their participants’ actions and outcomes. Toward explaining this behavior, we show that cartels can sometimes sustain higher profits when actions and outcomes are observed only privately, because better information can hinder collusion by helping firms devise more profitable deviations from the collusive agreement. We provide conditions under which maintaining privacy is optimal for cartels that follow a market-segmentation strategy.
Date issued
2018-12
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/122787
Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Economics
Journal
Journal of Political Economy
Publisher
University of Chicago Press
Citation
Sugaya, Takuo and Alexander Wolitzky. "Maintaining Privacy in Cartels." Journal of Political Economy 126, 6 (December 2018): 2569-2607 © 2018 University of Chicago.
Version: Final published version
ISSN
0022-3808
1537-534X

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