Contents:
Volume I
Acknowledgements
Introduction Margaret C. Levenstein and Stephen W. Salant
PART I HISTORICAL AGREEMENTS FOR VOLUME RESTRICTING
ARRANGEMENTS
1. (1891), ‘Agreement of the Southern Railway and Steamship
Association’
2. Document ref #080017 – Agreement Between the Dow Chemical
Company and the Deutsche Bromkonvention regarding the Global
Bromine Market, Midland, MI: Post Street Archives
3. (1943), ‘International Steel Agreement. September 30, 1926’
4. (1945), ‘International Sulphur Agreement of 1934’ and ‘Sulphur
Agreement of 1936’
5. (1945), ‘World Copper Agreement of 1935’
6. (1945), ‘American-German Agreement of 1938 Concerning Electro
Appliances’
7. (1974), Marketing Agreement for Navel Oranges Grown in Arizona
and Designated Part of California, Washington, DC: US Department of
Agriculture, Consumer and Marketing Service, Fruit and Vegetable
Division and Submission on Behalf of the California Arizona Citrus
League
8. (1980), International Electrical Association: A Continuing
Cartel, Report prepared for the Use of the Committee on Interstate
and Foreign Commerce United States House of Representatives and the
Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigation, June, Washington, DC:
US GPO
9. (2000), An Inside Look at a Cartel at Work: Common
Characteristics of International Cartels, Speech by James M.
Griffin, Deputy Assistant Attorney General, Antitrust Division of
the U.S. Department of Justice, April 6
PART II THE “CARTEL PROBLEM”
A Theoretical
10. Don Patinkin (1947), ‘Multiple-Plant Firms, Cartels, and
Imperfect Competition’
11. Joe S. Bain (1948), ‘Output Quotas in Imperfect Cartels’
12. George J. Stigler (1964), ‘A Theory of Oligopoly’
13. D.K. Osborne (1976), ‘Cartel Problems’
B Empirical
14. Richard A. Posner (1970), ‘A Statistical Study of Antitrust
Enforcement’
15. Joseph C. Gallo, Kenneth Dau-Schmidt, Joseph L. Craycraft and
Charles J. Parker (2000), ‘Department of Justice Antitrust
Enforcement, 1955–1997: An Empirical Study’
PART III MONITORING/ENFORCEMENT
A Theoretical
16. James W. Friedman (1971), ‘A Non-cooperative Equilibrium for
Supergames’
17. Edward J. Green and Robert H. Porter (1984), ‘Noncooperative
Collusion under Imperfect Price Information’
18. Dilip Abreu, David Pearce and Ennio Stacchetti (1990), ‘Toward
a Theory of Discounted Repeated Games with Imperfect
Monitoring’
19. Peter C. Cramton and Thomas R. Palfrey (1990), ‘Cartel
Enforcement with Uncertainty About Costs’
20. Drew Fudenberg, David Levine and Eric Maskin (1994), ‘The Folk
Theorem with Imperfect Public Information’
21. Julio J. Rotemberg and Garth Saloner (1986), ‘A
Supergame-Theoretic Model of Price Wars during Booms’
22. John Haltiwanger and Joseph E. Harrington, Jr. (1991), ‘The
Impact of Cyclical Demand Movements on Collusive Behavior’
23. Jean-Pierre Benoit and Vijay Krishna (1985), ‘Finitely Repeated
Games’
24. B. Douglas Bernheim and Michael D. Whinston (1990),
‘Multimarket Contact and Collusive Behavior’
B Empirical
25. Robert H. Porter (1983), ‘A Study of Cartel Stability: The
Joint Executive Committee, 1880–1886’
26. Glenn Ellison (1994), ‘Theories of Cartel Stability and the
Joint Executive Committee’
27. Margaret C. Levenstein (1997), ‘Price Wars and the Stability of
Collusion: A Study of the Pre-World War I Bromine Industry’
28. Margaret E. Slade (1992), ‘Vancouver’s Gasoline-Price Wars: An
Empirical Exercise in Uncovering Supergame Strategies’
29. Severin Borenstein and Andrea Shepard (1996), ‘Dynamic Pricing
in Retail Gasoline Markets’
PART IV INSIDERS AND OUTSIDERS
30. Gérard Gaudet and Stephen W. Salant (1991), ‘Increasing the
Profits of a Subset of Firms in Oligopoly Models with Strategic
Substitutes’
31. Claude D’Aspremont, Alexis Jacquemin, Jean Jaskold Gabszewicz
and John A. Weymark (1983), ‘On The Stability of Collusive Price
Leadership’
32. Joel M. Podolny and Fiona M. Scott Morton (1999), ‘Social
Status, Entry and Predation: The Case of British Shipping Cartels
1879–1929’
33. George Symeonidis (2000), ‘Price Competition and Market
Structure: The Impact of Cartel Policy on Concentration in the
UK’
Name Index
Volume II
Acknowledgements
An introduction by the editors to both volumes appears in Volume
I
PART I HETEROGENEITY
1. Steven N. Wiggins and Gary D. Libecap (1987), ‘Firm
Heterogeneities and Cartelization Efforts in Domestic Crude
Oil’
2. William S. Hallagan (1985), ‘Contracting Problems and the
Adoption of Regulatory Cartels’
3. Jonathan Cave and Stephen W. Salant (1995), ‘Cartel Quotas Under
Majority Rule’
4. Barbara J. Alexander (1997), ‘Failed Cooperation in
Heterogeneous Industries Under the National Recovery
Administration’
5. Joseph E. Harrington Jr. (1991), ‘The Determination of Price and
Output Quotas in a Heterogeneous Cartel’
6. Olivier Compte, Frédéric Jenny and Patrick Rey (2002), ‘Capacity
Constraints, Mergers and Collusion’
PART II VERTICAL RESTRAINTS
7. B. Douglas Bernheim and Michael D. Whinston (1985), ‘Common
Marketing Agency as a Device for Facilitating Collusion’
8. Elizabeth Granitz and Benjamin Klein (1996), ‘Monopolization by
“Raising Rivals’ Costs”: The Standard Oil Case’
9. Patrick Rey and Joseph Stiglitz (1995), ‘The Role of Exclusive
Territories in Producers’ Competition’
PART III NATURAL RESOURCE CARTELS
10. Glenn C. Loury (1986), ‘A Theory of ‘Oil’igopoly: Cournot
Equilibrium in Exhaustible Resource Markets with Fixed
Supplies’
11. Charles F. Mason and Stephen Polasky (2005), ‘What Motivates
Membership in Non-Renewable Resource Cartels?: The Case of
OPEC’
12. Stephen Polasky (1992), ‘Do Oil Producers Act as
‘Oil’igopolists?’
13. Jeffrey K. MacKie-Mason and Robert S. Pindyck (1987), ‘Cartel
Theory and Cartel Experience in International Minerals Markets’
14. Debora L. Spar (1994), ‘The Power to Persuade and the Success
of the International Diamond Cartel’
15. Gary D. Libecap and James L. Smith (2004), ‘Political
Constraints on Government Cartelization: The Case of Oil Production
Regulation in Texas and Saudi Arabia’
PART IV CONTRACTING AND COMMUNICATION ISSUES
16. Kai-Uwe Kühn (2001), ‘Fighting Collusion by Regulating
Communication between Firms’
17. Valerie Y. Suslow (2005), ‘Cartel Contract Duration: Empirical
Evidence from Inter-War International Cartels’
18. David Genesove and Wallace P. Mullin (2001), ‘Rules,
Communication, and Collusion: Narrative Evidence from the Sugar
Institute Case’
19. Margaret E. Slade (1990), ‘Strategic Pricing Models and
Interpretation of Price-War Data’
PART V COLLUSION AND INVESTMENT
20. Chaim Fershtman and Ariel Pakes (2000), ‘A Dynamic Oligopoly
with Collusion and Price Wars’
21. Carl Davidson and Raymond Deneckere (1990), ‘Excess Capacity
and Collusion’
22. Chaim Fershtman and Neil Gandal (1994), ‘Disadvantageous
Semicollusion’
23. Frode Steen and Lars Sørgard (1999), ‘Semicollusion in the
Norwegian Cement Market’
24. George Symeonidis (2001), ‘Price Competition, Innovation and
Profitability: Theory and UK Evidence’
PART VI CONTEMPORARY INTERNATIONAL CARTELS
25. John M. Connor (2001), ‘“Our Customers Are Our Enemies”: The
Lysine Cartel of 1992–1995’
26. Lawrence J. White (2001), ‘Lysine and Price Fixing: How Long?
How Severe?’
27. Simon J. Evenett, Margaret C. Levenstein and Valerie Y. Suslow
(2001), ‘International Cartel Enforcement: Lessons from the
1990s’
28. Margaret Levenstein and Valerie Y. Suslow (2004), ‘Contemporary
International Cartels and Developing Countries: Economic Effects
and Implications for Competition Policy’
Name Index
Edited by Margaret C. Levenstein, Executive Director, Michigan Census Research Data Center, Associate Research Scientist, Institute for Social Research and Adjunct Associate Professor, Ross School of Business, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, US and Stephen W. Salant, Professor of Economics, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, US
’This is the ultimate collection of primary documents and
previously published economic articles on cartels, carefully
selected and clearly presented in ten parts. Although the focus is
mainly on the economics of cartels, lawyers will also find
extremely interesting material on historical cartel agreements,
theoretical and empirical studies on cartel enforcement and
game-theory analyses of cartel behaviour. A must have for any
serious competition law library.’
*Ioannis Lianos, World Competition*
’Salant and Levenstein have brought together a dominant position in
the English-language literature on cartels. This collection should
be on the bookshelf of every economist seriously interested in
competition policy.’
*F.M. Scherer, Harvard University, US*
’Issues of cartel formation, cartel stability and cartel detection
have long been at the center of the study of industrial
organization and the design and enforcement of regulatory policy.
These volumes provide an invaluable collection of the most
important articles in this field. They make accessible a number of
important historical pieces and also provide a nice mix of theory
and empiricism. They should form a standard reference for those
interested in industrial organization in general and regulation in
particular.’
*George Norman, Tufts University, US*
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