1. World problems
  2. Cartels

Cartels

  • Commodity cartels

Nature

Cartels are unions of sellers whose aims are to raise, support or fix prices or affect conditions of sale. They control production, imports or sales by allocating quotas for member's activities. Cartel agreements among firms in developed market-economy countries affect imports into those countries. The restrictive business practices resulting from these agreements directly hamper the interests of other countries, including developing countries, whose normal export development is impeded. The types of cartels distinguished include import cartels, rebate cartels, and agreements on standards. Cartel activities, when they affect the domestic market or foreign trade interests of the developed market-economy countries, are usually subject to the laws providing for controls, which range from prohibition to abuse control. This would seem to be one of the reasons why the known instances of such cartel activities are not considerable in number.

Background

The global significance of cartels emerged in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, as industrialization fostered secretive alliances among major firms to manipulate markets. International concern intensified following high-profile cases, such as the 1990s lysine and vitamin cartels, which exposed the scale and impact of price-fixing across borders. Growing awareness has since led to coordinated international enforcement efforts, highlighting cartels as a persistent threat to fair competition and economic stability worldwide.This information has been generated by artificial intelligence.

Incidence

A prime example is the diamond cartel which since the 1920s has controlled production and distribution of diamonds in order to maintain an artificially high market value despite the quantity now produced. The cartel has been successful despite the political difficulties arising from a production base in southern Africa, the need to control production of diamonds in Siberia throughout the cold war period, and the existence of anti-trust legislation in countries such as the USA. The UK, where its principal offices are located, has naturally been reluctant to intervene in such a lucrative worldwide trade.

Claim

As world trade becomes concentrarted in fewer hands, every cartel scheme operated by transnational corporations has more extensive impact. National governments trying to maintain some degree of control over trade and monetary policy can ill afford to ignore the machinations of international cartels.

Counter-claim

Frankly, the concern over cartels is vastly overblown. In today’s globalized, highly regulated markets, the idea that cartels pose a significant threat is outdated. Most industries are too competitive and transparent for secret price-fixing to have any real impact. Resources spent on investigating cartels would be better used elsewhere. The so-called “cartel problem” is a distraction from more pressing economic and social issues that actually affect people’s daily lives.This information has been generated by artificial intelligence.

Broader

Narrower

Rebate cartels
Presentable
Import cartels
Presentable
Export cartels
Presentable
Domestic cartel
Unpresentable

Aggravates

Collusive tendering
Unpresentable

Aggravated by

Related

Monopolies
Presentable
Economic crime
Presentable

Strategy

Using cartels
Yet to rate

Value

Cartel
Yet to rate

Reference

SDG

Sustainable Development Goal #8: Decent Work and Economic GrowthSustainable Development Goal #9: Industry, Innovation and InfrastructureSustainable Development Goal #10: Reduced InequalitySustainable Development Goal #16: Peace and Justice Strong Institutions

Metadata

Database
World problems
Type
(C) Cross-sectoral problems
Biological classification
N/A
Subject
Content quality
Presentable
 Presentable
Language
English
1A4N
C2512
DOCID
11325120
D7NID
134186
Editing link
Official link
Last update
Oct 4, 2020