Editing Price fixing

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'''Price fixing''' is an anti-competitive agreement between participants on the same side in a market to buy or sell a product, service, or commodity at a fixed price, usually to maintain monopoly profits and to push back against Marxism's economic law that [[Tendency of the rate of profit to fall|competition results in falling rates of profit]].


'''Price fixing''' is an anti-competitive agreement between participants on the same side in a market to buy or sell a product, service, or [[commodity]] at a fixed price, usually to maintain monopoly profits and to push back against [[Marxism]]'s economic law that [[Tendency of the rate of profit to fall|competition results in falling rates of profit]].{{Helper}}
Under imperialism (the monopoly stage of capitalism) price fixing is commonly carried out by international cartels of producers, this can be observed especially in the [[Petroleum politics|oil markets]].
 
Under [[imperialism]] (the monopoly stage of [[capitalism]]) price fixing is commonly carried out by international cartels of producers, this can be observed especially in the [[Petroleum politics|oil markets]].
 
== Historical examples ==
 
=== Phoebus Cartel ===
On 23 December, 1924 all major lightbulb manufacturers developed an agreement to divide markets and fix lightblub prices. The document, titled "Convention for the Development and Progress of the International Incandescent Electric Lamp Industry" Members of the agreement included [[German Reich (1918–1933)|Germany]]'s Osram, the [[Kingdom of the Netherlands|Netherlands]]' Philips, [[French Republic|France]]'s Compagnie des Lampes, [[Hungary]]'s Tungsram, the [[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland|United Kingdom]]'s Associated Electrical Industries and [[Empire of Japan (1868–1947)|Japan]]'s Toyko Electric. The [[United States of America|United States]]' General Electric was a major force in developing and organising the agreement, however it was not an official member. GE was instead represented through its subsidiaries in the UK, [[Federative Republic of Brazil|Brazil]], [[Republic of China|China]] and [[Mexican United States|Mexico]]. Over the period of the agreement GE was able to "…acquire significant stakes in all the member companies that it did not already own." Although advantageous for GE, the cartel was first proposed by William Meinhardt of Osram in an attempt to counter [[Tendency of the rate of profit to fall|falling rates in profit]] due to a 55% fall in sales for the year previous. Meinhardt also oversaw a supervisory body setup by the cartel, where he managed the national lightbulb markets, the exchange of patents, the development of member companies in global trade, and the setting of standards.<ref name=":0">{{Citation|author=Markus Krajewski|year=2014|title=The great lightbulb conspiracy|title-url=https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/6905492|page=56-61|publisher=IEEE|doi=10.1109/MSPEC.2014.6905492|series=IEEE Spectrum|volume=15}}</ref>
 
Despite the stated goals being "…securing the cooperation of all parties to the agreement, ensuring the advantageous exploitation of their manufacturing capabilities in the production of lamps, ensuring and maintaining a uniformly high quality, increasing the effectiveness of electric lighting and increasing light use to the advantage of the consumer." The cartel had been able to reduce the lifespan of the incandescent lightbulb to 1000 hours by 1925, down from the 1500 to 2000 hour range between different companies beforehand. Due to this decrease in lifespan, sales among member companies rose, manufacturing costs dropped and prices were able to be artificially elevated, amounting to increased profits.<ref name=":0" />
 
Although the agreement was initially planned to last until 1955, [[Second World War|World War II]] caused its premature nullfication in 1940.<ref name=":0" />
 
== References ==
[[Category:Capitalism]]
[[Category:Capitalism]]
[[Category:Stubs]]
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