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Mitsuru Igami, Takuo Sugaya, Measuring the Incentive to Collude: The Vitamin Cartels, 1990–99, The Review of Economic Studies, Volume 89, Issue 3, May 2022, Pages 1460–1494, https://doi.org/10.1093/restud/rdab052
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Abstract
Do mergers help or hinder collusion? This article studies the stability of the vitamin cartels in the 1990s and presents a repeated-games approach to quantify “coordinated effects” of a merger. We use data and direct evidence from American courts and European agencies to show the collusive incentive of the short-lived vitamin C cartel was likely to be negative when it actually collapsed in 1995, whereas the incentives of the long-lived cartels (vitamins A and E, and beta carotene) were unambiguously positive until the prosecution in 1999. Simulations suggest some mergers could have prolonged the vitamin C cartel, but others could have further destabilized it, because both the direction and magnitude of coordinated effects depend not only on the number of firms but also on their cost asymmetry.