Firms can be anti-competitive through:
1. ❌
This is an agreement on set prices which is illegal and if a firm is caught and found guilty it can be fined 10% of all revenue over a 3 year period. Manufacturers are allowed to have a ‘RRP’ but they cannot insist that this is the price the firm sell for.
2. ❌ to sell to certain retailers.
A manufacturer can’t ensure retailers will sell at the right price then they can choose not to sell to specific retailers that would ❌ but sell off cheaply e.g. high-end perfume sold only to Selfridges rather than Boots.
3. ❌
This is when an existing firm ❌ lowers prices often ❌ and often occurs when they are ❌ by a ❌. The existing firm can afford to lose money for longer and will raise prices again once the other firm has been forced out of the market and this is ❌.
4. ❌ pricing policies
Giving bulk buying/regular trade discounts is good business sense, but it makes it harder for small firms to compete. This is why individual grocers/bakers cannot survive easily against supermarkets like Tesco.
5. Tying in related goods and services
When firms only sell a product if consumers also pay for ❌ products e.g. only buy a game console if games are bought as well, insurance packages.
6. Refusing the competition ❌ to or use of essential facilities
Walls and Coke provided fridge and freezers free of charge to small retailers on the condition that they sell their products. Some airports have agreements with some airlines allowing them only access to land on that airport.
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Price fixing
Price fixing
Predatory Pricing
Predatory Pricing
deliberately
deliberately
selling at a loss
selling at a loss
frowned upon
frowned upon
Discriminating
Discriminating
other related
other related