ECON 308 Chapter : 308 Mason Superior Notes.docx

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Canadian competition tribunal allowed the recent superior propane-icg merger to proceed, in spite of demonstrated anticompetitive effects, because of demonstrated offsetting efficiencies. At the center of superior is the role of efficiencies in horizontal merger policy. Efficiencies have a unique role in merger legislation in canada. The 1986 canadian competition act expressly allows otherwise anticompetitive mergers if they also generate efficiencies sufficient to overcome the anticompetitive effects. Superior was the first case since the passage of the competition act in which a merger found to be anticompetitive was permitted because of offsetting efficiencies. Two effects are connected because any change in production technology or costs will affect how the merged firm competes. If the overall effect of the merger is that prices to consumers are predicted to rise (loss of consumer surplus), then the merger is said to be anticompetitive. This rise in price, while hurting consumers, will benefit the merged firm in the form of increased profits (producer surplus).

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