Monday, August 08, 2005

Competition

I just bumped into an interesting post in a pretty interesting blog today. You see economics is a favourite topic of mine for discussion. I can hear the in-drawn breaths, 'No way, and I thought he was such a nice guy too', you think. Well, we all have our dark secrets, mine is economics. It feels good to have finally got this off my chest.

Now Michael Higgins very eloquently puts up a case for competition being essential for quality to sustain. He is right. I can hear a few 'humpfs' there, why did you write this post then? you ask, well I've set my mind to play the devil's advocate in this deal and would like to highlight the pitfalls of competition.

We all I'm sure remember the time when we used to sweat it out in a line for over an hour to draw cash or take a demand draft in our neighbourhood bank. Or the time when we were very nice to the bank manager and wait for weeks so that he would give you a housing loan or a car loan. Now those days are gone. Modern competition is in. Cash can be drawn in an ATM under 10 minutes, DDs can be printed on the internet, any kind of a loan is available at your disposal. Now where is the problem?, you ask, the problem lies in the fact that the bank ceases to be a group of people you know and becomes a faceless system. It isn't such a big deal, you say, but when you consider that you are effectively reduced to an account number or a loan application number and cease to be a living breathing human being as far as the bank is concerned, you have to stop and think. You become a sales target for aggressive banks, more and more loans are poured your way and the number of credit cards that you carry in your wallet increase.

After a point you stop paying the entire amount due on your card to the bank and just keep servicing the outstanding by paying the interest. What follows is usually a default or two and the eventual blacklisting by all banks. You are a pariah, not just because you over spent, but because no one told you what a debt trap was. If it had been the old system, the bank manager would probably not have given you the loans (or credit cards) that you now have. You might have even saved a lot more money. Now imagine if an entire country does this. If you think that this is an extreme case, then do read about what happened in South Korea (you can read about it here too). This could very well happen in India as well, till the feeding frenzy of certain banks is held under control and the borrowers are educated. There certainly are some good banks that have a good system of credit appraisal that factors in issues like over spending on part of it's customers while processing loan applications but largely the process followed by most banks is shocking.

Small and profitable banks which quite frequently are able to offer more personalised services, have suffered due to intense competition and are being gobbled up by bigger banks who follow an acquisition route to growth as opposed to a more organic approach. So if you say that your bank is niche and different, the chances that it would soon be consolidated with something bigger is quiet high. For example well run banks like ANZ Grindlays and Times Bank were consolidated into much larger banks and in the end their customers suffered.
I am not going into stuff like phone banking and the machines that we speak to everyday when we call up our banks. These have become urban legends and are crosses that we bear in the name modernisation.

Now lets come to the other stuff. Do you remember the number of aerated drinks that were there before Coke or Pepsi came to India? Where have they all gone? Competition has wiped them out. They either have been bought over or have keeled under intense marketing pressure brought about by these two giants. So this effectively leaves these two biggies out in the middle to slug it out for market share. Like wise you can take a lot of examples in which the smaller players have been beaten out of the game by the larger players, eventually leaving 2-3 companies in serious competition.

This is a system called Oligopoly.

Oligopoly is a market form in which a small number of sellers dominate the market. In effect instead of one big fat company monopolising the market you have two or three big fat companies sharing the spread. Sure, they compete with each other but this competition is not a perfect competition (which a market where no producer or consumer has the power to influence the market and the market would broadly follow the laws of supply and demand). Sometimes, Oligopoly can easily lead to forming of cartels. It can also lead to a scenario where the buyer of goods not being very aware of the pricing mechanism or the quality of goods sold (Remember the contaminated ground water incident involving Coke and Pepsi, when these two giants came together for the first time). Oligopoly is even supported by the government in areas like telecom for reasons best known to them. Now, don't get me wrong, intense competition under Oligopoly means that the customers benefit but in the long term, this competition might have adverse impact on things like quality and product innovation. I can see a few economists shaking their heads to this but let me illustrate.


Now, lets take quality. Competition increases quality levels, yes. But to a point only. To compete, companies often have to cut costs. Cost cutting can come through a few things, increasing operational efficiency, cutting out unnecessary expenses, finding cheaper raw material and laying off staff. Now, there is a limit to how much a company can optimize, it would to a point, then it would study its product and find cheaper methods of producing this product. When they do, there is a good chance that these cheaper options may indeed affect quality. If you doubt that, then tell me how many times have you heard the words "they don't make them like they used to..". At times there is a collusion between companies in Oligopoly and reduction in quality ends up being universal. Even if that doesn't happen then in the least quality differences between brands is highly negligible, often advertising, brand recall and discount offers are reasons for purchase. 'Quality' is often a perception than a reality.

Many companies choose to increase their marketing budgets instead of increasing their infrastructure / product development expenditure as a way of fending off competition. So what you probably get is the same old stuff but in a glitz pack and a star studded ad campaign(eg The new and Improved XYZ detergent!). Companies, especially in the FMCG (or the Fast moving consumer goods) sector often would entirely outsource their product to a third party manufacturer and concentrate on advertising and brand building. This model as you maybe aware is actively followed by most American companies. It's not a bad model per se since it has given a big fillip to the Indian outsourcing and export industries which cater to these large brands. Unfortunately, the experience with these brands is that they loose their edge in product innovation as their primary focus is on marketing, packaging and delivery.


Now, so is competition bad? Not at all. Like I've said earlier competition is great, especially for the consumer, it gives more options often at cheaper cost. But I urge you to realise that competition in its true sense happens only when it beats out elements within that attack its very core.

How would this happen? It would happen if the consumer protection means wide spread consumer education and faster redressal of consumer grievances. It would happen if scenarios like oligopoly or monopoly are avoided and the government along with local authorities actively supports small companies in their growth and hence offering viable competition to the big bullies in the neighbourhood.

(I realise that this post leaves itself wide open for criticism and opposing views, this is by choice, I solicit your views. And my apologies to those I've thoroughly bored in this selfish endeavour. For those who don't know me, I'm a banker by profession and needless to say that these views are mine and not of any organisation )

12 comments:

Michael Higgins said...

Hi R.
Thanks for linking to my post.
I think competition only works for the betterment of consumers if most consumers put a little effort into shopping around. If consumers are lazy and only buy bargains, then the market will produce low quality goods. But if some people shop around for quality, the market will respond by giving a choice between low-cost low quality and high-cost high-quality.

Does competition always leave only a few oligarchs in the end? Not necessarily. Consider the auto industry. In the US, there was once dozens of auto makers, then by the 1970s there were only 3 major automakers. Today, there are dozens of autos from around the world to choose from.

shana p. said...

sshhhh... don't tell anyone, but I am fascinated by economics and market systems. I love competition, it is the enemy of laziness. The problem I see in the US is the trend towards oligopoly and the loss of small business. I think society benefits from family owned businesses and the push towards larger companies (think Wal-Mart) dominating the marketplace contributes to a less personalized society. That being said, Wal-Mart and others are successful because people choose to shop there and choose the lower prices above more human interaction - the Wal-Mart near me has automatic check out so that you do not even have to interact with the clerk. So I guess what I am saying is... I agree with you! Great post, and not boring! I will have to check out Michael Higgin's blog...

Winston said...

You guys are nerds. Few bloggers have the confidence to publish so many paragraphs and still believe people are actually reading it.

R. said...

Hey Michael, It was a pleasure reading your post. I've always held a feeling that a lot of what is touted as 'quality' is a just perception. Which isn't bad really. Agreed on the auto manufacturing front, but since then how many small maufacturers have come up in that industry? In effect you have a dozen companies ruling the roost across the world in the auto segment.

Cheesey! Thanks :) I agree with yuo 100%. This is true for most retail industries. I think companies have got their strategy wrong.

Winston, I tend to go on and on about something i like talking about..what can i say..

Janaki said...

hey u sounded exactly like my degree ka economics ka textbook and while it was great to be reminded of various theories, still wondering if u said anything new....hmmmm but then thats hardly the point rt?

Lubna said...

Economics.... Good Lord. For the first time ever, I did not read through your entire post, just snippets of it. I still get nightmares when I think of this subject. But then, economic text books are so dry, all said and done, you did make economics a trifle interesting. Have you read stuff about microfinance, now that is an interesting grass-root level banking and it is working, especially in AP where special legislations have been carved out for the purpose.
PS: Thanks for linking my blog up here.

R. said...

Jaygee, Lubu, thanks for enduring through this post :)

Lubu, yes, I've followed the progress of microfinance, and In my opinion things haven't been so rosy though , long way to go before it is a viable proposition for the banking sector. It is a segment to watch out for though

R. said...

Zaa don't bother, I myself have slept off after the first paragraph :)

Anonymous said...

Nice post. I agree with you to a great extent. Many of the arguments that get made in favor of letting market forces work themselves out forget that the real world is far from being perfectly competitive and contains lots of externalitites. The externalities show up in different ways.

For example, many companies have reduced their costs by putting those gory recorded machines out to deal with the consumers rather than the friendly consumer reps. we used to have. Now instead of telling them what I want to get out of the call, I have to listen to the menu of ten options before I can make my choice. The company has acieved its cost reduction by wasting my time, and thus I would argue reducing the quality of the service.

You also bring about the element of human interaction that is missing in many of our online transactions or as cheesecakey points out in large departmental stores (that does not mean these are bad things, far from it).

Finally, the trend towards consolidation in sectors such as banking seems unstoppable given the changes in technology. What that does is also reduces numbers of employees needed. This is also true of many other sectors. On the flip side of it, a large fraction of employment comes from small cap. businesses and not from Tatas, GEs or Wal-Marts of the world. In such an event, I wonder what increasingly oligopolistic markets will mean for employment trends in years to come.

R. said...

Good to see you back buddy, stay cool!

Annie Zaidi said...

too much apologizging for what was, I thought, a very lucidly put argument. :)

R. said...

Annie! Thanks for dropping by. This is a rare honour.

Well to be honest, people read my blog for a whole lot of reasons of which economics isn't a part. :-)I don't look at these as apologies at all, just nifty ways of killing dissent hehe