Ethics in Marketplace
Ethics in Marketplace
Ethics in Marketplace
firms.
Market Competition: But market competition
There are three models of describing three degrees of competition in the market:
3. Oligopoly
Perfect Competition
Perfect Competition has the following characteristics:
Large no. of buyers and sellers.
market. The goods being sold are so similar to each other. No external party like government set the price, quality and quantity of the goods being bought or sold.
System of production
Equilibrium point:
Is the point at which the supply and demand curves meet, so the amount buyers want to buy equals amount seller wants to sell and price buyers are willing to pay equals price seller are willing to take.
Sellers point of view: at equilibrium point, sellers contribution is equal to the price 2. Buyers point of view: at equilibrium point, price consumer pays equals the worth of goods.
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them to allocate, use & distribute their goods with perfect efficiency:Motivates firms to invest resources in industries where consumer demand is high. ( effective allocation) 2. Encourages to minimize amount of resources consumed in producing a commodity. ( efficient use of resources) 3. Distributes commodities in a way buyers desire.
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sellers:1. All are free to enter & leave. ( negative right of freedom of opportunity) 2. All have full knowledge. ( negative right of freedom of consent) 3. No single buyer or seller dominates. ( negative right of freedom from coercion)
Cautions
Do not establish any other form of justice.( ignore egalitarian justice) 2. Maximizes the utility of participants of markets, given the constraint of their budget. 3. Might diminish the positive rights of those outside ( who cannot compete) 4. Ignores & conflicts with the demands of caring.
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Monopoly
Features:1. One seller 2. High entry barriers 3. Quantity below equilibrium 4. Prices above equilibrium & supply curve 5. Can extract monopoly profit
Oligopolistic Competition
1. Impure market structures. 2. Exercise some influence over price 3. Easier for firms to unite ( & act as a single giant) 4. Not open but closed
instead of others sellers being able to "freely and immediately enter" other sellers are prevented from entering due to
high start-up costs anticompetitive machinations of the oligopoly firms long-term contracts with buyers etc.
instead of "numerous sellers, none of whom has a substantial share of the market" a few sellers have a near 100% share of the market
oligopolistic conditions Horizontal merger : "unification of two or more companies that were
Ethical consequences
1. Violations of capitalist justice
others are prevented from entering the market sellers dictate terms
buyers have no recourse
Explicit agreements
1. Price fixing:
firms agree to limit their production result in artificially induced shortages hence in artificially high prices
firms sell to retailers on condition that retailers will not buy from certain other companies (contra openness) or will not sell outside of a certain geographical area (contra distribution)
4. Tying Arrangements:
The seller agrees to sell to buyer only on condition that the buyer agrees to buy other products from the firm.
manufacturer sells to retailer only on the condition that they agree to charge the same set retail price for the goods. Effects
Tacit Agreements:
Price Leader is the firm recognized as the industry leader in oligopoly industries for the purpose of setting prices based on levels announced by that firm.
Bribery
Bribes can be used to secure the sale of products Serve to shut out other sellers & hence, are anticompetitive Ethical rules for bribery : 1. Is the offer of payment initiated by the payer? 2. Is the payment made to induce the payee to act in a manner contrary to the duties or responsibilities of their office? 3. Are the nature and purpose of the payment considered ethically unobjectionable by the local culture?
Bribery
Situation:
Tom is the Purchasing Manager for Cyclone
Industries
Toms job is to buy stuff for Cyclone
Carol is a Salesperson for Penn Corp. Alice is a Salesperson for Omega Corp. Penn Corp. and Omega Corp. are
competitors
Carol and Alice are both trying to sell to Cyclone
Penns bid is better than Omegas bid Alice offers Tom $1000 if he decides to
Antitrust View
Regulation View
Do-nothing View
It is argued that although competition within industries has declined, it has been replaced by competition between industries with substitutable products. 2. The economic power of any large corporation may be balanced and restrained by the countervailing power of other large corporate groups in society. 3. Large corporations are good particularly in light of the globalization of business that has taken place during recent decades.
1.
Antitrust View
Assumptions: 1. If an industry is not atomistic with many small competitors, there is likely to be administrative discretion over prices. 2. Concentration results in recognized interdependence among companies, with no price competition in concentrated industries. 3. Concentration is due mostly to mergers. 4. There is a positive correlation between concentration and profitability.
Assumptions
5. Concentration is aggravated by product differentiation and advertising. 6. There is oligopolistic coordination by signaling through press releases or other means. View: By breaking up large corporations into smaller units, higher levels of competition will emerge in those industries that are currently highly concentrated, which results in decrease in explicit and tacit
Regulation View
Concentration gives large firms an economic power that allows them to fix prices and engage in other forms of behavior that are not in the public interest. To ensure that consumers are not harmed by large firms, regulatory agencies and legislation should be set up to restrain and control the activities of large corporations.