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Supplier hold-up problem . If one company is supplying another company a good used in production (such as a supplier of coal to an electric company), then the supplier can hold-up the buyer company.
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Supplier hold-up problem • If one company is supplying another company a good used in production (such as a supplier of coal to an electric company), then the supplier can hold-up the buyer company. • This works if the buyer company decides to make an investment to adjust its products to make better use of the supplier’s product. • Once the investment is made, the supply can raise its prices.
Supplier hold-up problem • The investment by the buyer costs him 500. • The gross gain to the buyer is 1500. • The net gain is 1500-500=1000. • The supplier can raise the price by 750 • This would reduce the net gain of the buyer by 750 to 250. • If the buyer switches to a new supplier, the buyer’s investment (of 500) is lost to him and the supplier loses 1000 worth of previous business with him.
Holdup payoffs:(Buyer, Supplier) Keep Price (1000,0) Keep Supplier Make investment Supplier (250,750) Raise price Buyer Buyer New Supplier (-500,-1000) Don’t invest (keep Supplier) (0,0) Buyer’s investment costs 500 – only useful for that supplier. Saves buyer 1500 (net 1000). Supplier can raise price by 750. Supplier losing the Buyer’s business costs him 1000.
Supplier hold-up problem • Now the investment is 1000 (instead of 500). • The gross gain to the buyer remains 1500. • The net gain changes to 1500-1000=500. • The supplier can still raise the price by 750 • This would reduce the net gain of the buyer by 750 to -250. (rather than +250) • If the buyer switches to a new supplier, the buyer’s investment (of 1000) is lost to him and the supplier loses 1000 worth of previous business with him.
Holdup payoffs:(Buyer, Supplier) Keep Price (1000,0) (500,0) Keep Supplier Make investment Supplier (250,750) (-250,750) Raise price Buyer Buyer New Supplier (-500,-1000) (-1000,-1000) Don’t invest (keep Supplier) (0,0) What if investment now costs 1000? Potential savings 500. What happens? Another reason for a government to allow Vertical Integration.
Example: Soviet Military • State forced to buy arms from specific manufactures. • Arms manufacturers were able to cut costs by substituting goods of inferior quality. • The state attempted to counter this by employing a small army of inspectors. • Many items: tanks. Expensive to monitor during production. • Inferior quality was readily observable once delivered. • A compromise reached: the inspectors overlooked shortfalls in quantity and late deliveries, in return for improvements in quality; • More efficient outcome because lowest quality items cost more to produce than they were worth to the army.
Example: Fischer Body. • GM signed a contract with Fisher Body to provide it with closed metal bodies. • Early 1920s: unexpected increase in demand. • The contract was cost-plus: GM pays 17% over and above any non-capital costs. • Fisher had incentive to build new plants further away from GM’s plants, so that they could profit from the transportation costs. • Solution: a merger between GM and Fisher.
Training and Skills Shortages • New employees require training before they are fully productive. • Training may be firm specific or more general. • If the employee pays for the training (reduced wages), the firm has an incentive to offering them a different contract on less favourable terms; the company may also cherry-pick the best workers: workers can be exploited. • More difficult to recruit. • If company pays, workers can threaten to leave and work for a competitor. The company may counter this by making ex-employees sign a contract that they will not work for a direct competitor for a certain period of time. The contract may or may not be enforceable. • Both cases, there is a disincentive to make investment in skills (in particular general skills) which would benefit both parties.
Why is there hold-up problem? • (a) unforeseeable external factors: global technology shifts or changes in consumer lifestyles, • (b) lack of trust, difficulty the buyer has in re-assuring the supplier that the money has been invested properly or indeed that it has been invested at all, • (c) asymmetric information, for instance the supplier may over-estimate the cost of the investment to the buyer or ascertaining quality at points of time. • (d) monitoring quality can be expensive/difficult.
Contracting around hold-up? Could the contract could specify that the work will be done at a fixed price, thereby eliminating the problem? • Difficult to write contract that anticipates every possible situation that may occur during a length project. • Loopholes may allow the supplier to default on the contract in subtle ways or take advantage of unforeseeable external events. • Proving quality/effort in court can be difficult.