Competition Policy

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  • Created by: ekenny5
  • Created on: 11-05-22 17:01
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  • Competition Policy
    • The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) is the regulatory body in the UK overseeing markets and have the power to intervene
      • ORR - rail regulators
      • CAA - aviation
      • OFCOM - telecommunications
      • OFWAT - water
      • OFGEM - gas and electric
      • must be in line with the European Competition Commission while in the EU
    • Aims of Competition Policy
      • Protecting public interest
        • prevent excessive pricing
        • promote competition
        • ensure quality, standards and choice
        • promote innovation
      • regulate natural monopolies
        • ensure effective privatisation of natural monopolies
      • When does the CMA intervene
        • anti-trust and cartel agreements
        • investigate mergers
        • liberalise concentrated markets
        • monitor state aid control - eg excessive subsidies distorting markets
    • Monopoly Regulation
      • price regulation: prices unable to increase by more than RPI
        • or RPI - X to promote efficiency
        • RPI + K to allow for capital investment
          • aim of allocative efficiency
            • or RPI - X to promote efficiency
          • depends on level of K and X
      • quality control/ perfect targets
        • can lead to shortcuts
      • Profit control - rate of return regulation
        • asymmetric information
      • Taxing profits
        • worsens monopoly outcomes, avoidance, reduced innovation
      • Merger policy if MS >25%
      • privatisation, deregulation and reducing trade barriers
      • Evaluation
        • level of information
        • costs vs benefits
          • admin costs
          • especially if ineffective
        • regulatory capture
        • lose the benefits of monopoly
        • risk of gov failure
    • Privatisation
      • state owned operations sold to private firms
      • introduce competition
      • Advantages: increase allocative and productive efficiency
        • move towards competitive P=MC
          • consumer surplus
        • reduce waste
        • profit incentive
      • Disadvantages: limited competition so inefficiency, may be loss making industries even if they're socially desirable
        • natural monopolies need large output to benefit from EOS
          • create oligopoly
      • HIDO:
        • level of competition
        • level of regulation
    • Deregulation
      • reduce legal barriers to entry to incentivise competition
        • P=AR to P=MR showing consumer surplus
      • Advantages: consumer choice so allocative efficiency, productive and X efficiency, increased dynamic efficiency
      • Disadvantages: loss of natural monopoly - waste due to duplicating resources, formation of oligopoly rather than competition
      • HIDO:
        • short run vs long run
        • other barriers to entry
        • level of regulation
    • Nationalisation
      • taking an industry into public ownership
      • For:
        • economies of scale
          • lower AC and lower P
        • more focus on service provision and allocation of merit goods
        • less likely to be externalities
          • socially optimum levels
        • gov can use the public sector for macro objectives
          • manipulating inflation using wages
      • Against:
        • diseconomies of scale risk
        • lack of incentive to minimise costs - complacent and waste
        • lower supernormal profits
        • burden on tax payers
          • opp cost
        • low competition means higher prices
        • moral hazard
        • political policies override commercial issues
      • Evaluation
        • funding vs delivery
        • Public Private Partnership?
        • regulation
        • competition in private sector could be better
        • private objectives

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