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| Competition law |
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| Basic concepts |
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- History of competition law
- Monopolization
- Coercive monopoly
- Natural monopoly
- Barriers to entry
- Market power
- SSNIP test
- Relevant market
- Merger control
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| Anti-competitive practices |
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- Collusion
- Formation of cartels
- Price fixing
- Bid rigging
- Product bundling and tying
- Refusal to deal
- Exclusive dealing
- Dividing territories
- Conscious parallelism
- Predatory pricing
- Misuse of patents and copyrights
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| Laws and doctrines |
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United States - Sherman Antitrust Act
- Clayton Antitrust Act
- Robinson-Patman Act
- FTC Act
- Hart-Scott-Rodino Act
- Merger guidelines
- Essential facilities doctrine
- Noerr-Pennington doctrine
- Rule of reason
Europe - European Community
competition law - Irish Competition Law
- Competition Act 1998 (UK)
Australia |
| Enforcement authorities and organizations |
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- International Competition Network
- List of competition regulators
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| edit box |
Price fixing is an agreement between business competitors to sell the same product or service at the same price. In general, it is an agreement intended to ultimately push the price of a product as high as possible, leading to profits for all the sellers. Price-fixing can also involve any agreement to fix, peg, discount or stabilize prices. The principal feature is any agreement on price, whether expressed or implied. For the buyer, meanwhile, the practice results in a phenomenon similar to price gouging.
Price fixing requires a conspiracy between two or more sellers; the purpose is to coordinate pricing for mutual benefit at the expense of buyers. Sellers might agree to sell at a common target price; set a common "minimum" price; buy the product from a supplier at a specified "maximum" price; adhere to a price book or list price; engage in cooperative price advertising; standardize financial credit terms offered to purchasers; use uniform trade-in allowances; limit discounts; discontinue a free service or fix the price of one component of an overall service; adhere uniformly to previously-announced prices and terms of sale; establish uniform costs and markups; impose mandatory surcharges; purposefully reduce output or sales in order to charge higher prices; or purposefully share or "pool" markets, territories, or customers.
Generally, price fixing is illegal, but it may nevertheless be tolerated or even sanctioned by some governments at various times, particularly among those whose countries are developing economies. See also Collusion.
In neo-classical economics, price fixing is inefficient. The anti-competitive agreement by producers to fix prices above the market price transfers some of the consumer surplus to those producers and also results in a deadweight loss.