Explanation : Common and more direct competition reducing cooperative strategy is collusion. Collusive strategies often are illegal. There are two types of collusive strategies—explicit
collusion and tacit collusion. Explicit
collusion means that two or more competing
firms negotiate directly to jointly agree about
the amount to produce as well as the prices
that will be charged for what is produced.
Explicit collusion strategies are illegal in the
The United States and most developed economies
(except in regulated industries). Therefore,
firms that use such strategies may face
litigation and may be found guilty of
noncompetitive actions.
Tacit collusion exists when several firms in
an industry indirectly coordinate their
production and pricing decisions by
observing each other’s competitive actions
and responses. Firms that engage in tacit
collusion recognize that they are
interdependent and that they're competitive
actions and responses significantly affect
competitors’ behaviors toward them. Tacit
collusion results in less than fully competitive
production levels and prices that are higher
then they might otherwise be. Firms engaging
in tacit collusion do not directly negotiate
output and pricing decisions, as they do in
explicit collusion. This type of competition reducing
the strategy is more com m on in
industries that are highly concentrated, such
as breakfast cereals and airlines.
A mutual forbearance is a form of tacit
collusion in which competition is reduced
because firms fear responses to competitive
attacks from competitors with whom they
compete in multiple markets.