Ethics in The Marketplace
Ethics in The Marketplace
Ethics in The Marketplace
Competition is part of the free enterprise system. Competition tends to produce efficiency in the market and benefits the general consumer by resulting in a variety of goods at the best prices. We shall examine just a few of the areas where the temptations to act immorally are significant, and where some practices are morally questionable.
Perfect/pure competition Monopolistic Competition Oligopoly (Sugar Mills, Flour Mills) Monopoly (Wapda)
In such markets, prices rise when supply falls, inducing greater production. Thus, prices and quantities move towards the equilibrium point, where the amount produced exactly equals the amount buyers want to purchase. Thus, perfectly free markets satisfy three of the moral criteria justice, utility, and rights.
In the capitalist sense of the word, justice is when the benefits and burdens of society are distributed such that a person receives the value of the contribution he or she makes to an enterprise. Perfectly competitive free markets embody this sense of justice, since the equilibrium point is the only point at which both the buyer and seller receive the just price for a product. Such markets also maximize the utility of buyers and sellers by leading them to use and distribute goods with maximum efficiency.
Efficiency comes about in perfectly competitive free markets in three main ways: They motivate firms to invest resources in industries with a high consumer demand and move away from industries where demand is low. They encourage firms to minimize the resources they consume to produce a commodity and to use the most efficient technologies. They distribute commodities among buyers such that buyers receive the most satisfying commodities they can purchase, given what is available to them and the amount they have to spend.
Monopoly Competition
Monopoly competition In a monopoly, two of the seven conditions are absent: there is only one seller, and other sellers cannot enter the market.
Monopolistic markets and their high prices and profits violate capitalist justice because the seller charges more than the goods are worth. Thus, the prices the buyer must pay are unjust. In addition, the monopoly market results in a decline in the efficiency of the system. Shortages of things that consumers want will result, and with these shortages come higher than normal prices. Since no other seller can enter the market, the shortage will continue-along with the abnormally high profits.
Oligopolistic Competition
Oligopolistic Competition Most industries are not entirely monopolistic. Most are dominated by a few large firms. These markets lie somewhere in between the monopoly and the perfectly competitive free market; the most important type of these imperfectly competitive markets is the oligopoly.
In an oligopoly, two of the seven conditions are not present. Instead of many sellers, there are only a few significant ones. Second, as with the monopoly, other sellers are not free to enter the market. Markets like this which are dominated by four to eight firms are highly concentrated markets.
Oligopolies can set high prices through explicit agreements to restrain competition. The more highly concentrated the oligopoly, the easier it is to plan against the interests of society, economic freedom, and justice. The following list identifies practices that are
clearly unethical:
Unethical Practices
Unethical Practices
It is difficult to legislate against many common oligopolistic price setting practices, however, because they are accomplished by tacit agreement. Firms may, without ever discussing it explicitly, realize that competition is not in their collective best interests. Therefore, they may recognize one firm as the price leader, raising their prices in reaction when the leader decides to do so. No matter how prices are set, however, clearly social utility declines when prices are artificially raised.
What should society to do in the face of the high degree of market concentration in oligopolistic industries? There are three main points of view.
Second, the Antitrust view argues that prices and profits in highly concentrated industries are higher than they should be. By breaking up large corporation into smaller units, they claim, higher levels of competition will emerge in those industries. The result will be a decrease in collusion, greater innovation, and lower prices.
The third view is the Regulation view, which can be seen as a middle ground between the other two. Those who advocate regulation do not wish to lose the economies of scale offered by large corporations, but they also wish to ensure that consumers are not harmed by large firms.
Therefore, they suggest setting up regulatory agencies and legislation to control the activities of large corporations. Some even suggest that the government should take over the operation of firms where only public ownership can guarantee that they operate in the public interest.