German FAZ: The seven dangers for the competition system 003856

Dangerous competition for Germany? Chinese dockers in Qingdao
Image: AFP

We can prevent the concentration of economic power and improve opportunities for prosperity. However, this raises the fundamental question: Does competition in a market economy really serve the people? A guest post.

The competitive order is facing major challenges in the course of the digital and ecological transformation processes in Germany. In view of the concentrated power of Big Tech companies, for example, it is not just about increasing economic welfare. In the spirit of Franz Böhm, one of the fathers of post-war German antitrust law, it is also about the competition “as the most ingenious instrument of disempowerment in history”. Since then, the competition regime has been extremely successful in combating cartels and monopolies. This is proven not least by the concentration reports of the Monopolies Commission. If you look at the company concentration, the share of the 100 largest companies in the overall economic value added shrank from 1978 to 2020 from 19.4 to 14 percent. Personnel ties at company management level have fallen even more drastically, by almost 90 percent since the heyday of “Deutschland AG”.

These achievements should not be underestimated. This is shown by a view across the Atlantic. In the USA, the antitrust authorities are fighting with much greater concentrations. These correlate with significant price premiums that illustrate the damage to consumers. In Germany, price surcharges, i.e. the difference between economic production costs and market prices, are only increasing in individual, highly concentrated sectors. This includes mineral oil processing. In other sectors, such as the service sector, on the other hand, we are seeing falling margins.

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