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Air cargo transport
cartels harm economies
Shanghai Daily, China, December 08, 2010
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By
Pradeep S Mehta
AIR
cargo transport cartels are a major problem
worldwide - resulting in overcharges and hampering
economic development - and the first World
Competition Day on Sunday (December 5) raised
awareness of the need to break up cartels.
Sunday
was the 30th anniversary of the adoption of the UN
international standard for competition laws. They
are officially known as the UN Set of Multilateral
Principles and Rules for the Control of
Restrictive Business Practices, better known as
the UN Set on Competition Policy.
Many
countries already celebrate National Competition
Days, including European Union member states,
Brazil and Zambia. The events were used to raise
awareness and rally the general public around the
issue of air cargo cartels, which have been
causing serious harm to consumers and the economy.
The EU
slapped one of its biggest fines in history on 11
airlines, totaling 799.4 million euros (US$1.1
billion) for running a global cargo cartel, which
coordinated action on surcharges for fuel and
security between 1999 and 2006.
The
prosecution by the EU was not the first for most
of the airlines, since earlier the US Department
of Justice had also found that some of the world's
biggest airlines had conspired between 2000 and
2006 to fix cargo prices. In 2009, three cargo
airlines in the US agreed to pay fines totaling
US$214 million for the same crime. In this case,
15 airlines were prosecuted and a fine of US$1.6
billion was imposed. In addition, three senior air
cargo industry executives agreed to serve jail
terms.
Cartels in the air cargo industry should be of
concern to all stakeholders as they seriously
undermine economic development and poverty
reduction in developing countries. A study done
for the International Air Cargo Association and
Air Cargo Forum by John Kasarda and others in 2006
showed that the air cargo industry transports
almost 30 percent of all international trade, with
an annual value of US$2.7 trillion.
The
study also showed that Korean Air, Lufthansa,
Singapore Airlines, Cathay Pacific and China
Airlines were the largest combination
passenger-cargo carriers in terms of capacity.
American Airlines and United Airlines were found
to be providing substantial cargo service even
without use of dedicated freighters, while
airlines such as Lufthansa, Air France and KLM had
broad geographic coverage, servicing more than 50
countries, and British Airways offered cargo
service to over 100 countries.
It is,
therefore, very alarming to see that almost all
the major players in the air cargo market were
part of a cartel, and one shudders at the impact
in terms of overcharges that consumers across the
globe suffered due to the cartel. The air cargo
transport industry also specializes in high value
to weight products (such as minerals), perishable
goods, emergency deliveries and products requiring
high security.
Most
of these products find their way into the value
chain of most finished products; hence
"cartelizing" their transport has serious
multiplier effects on the prices of the final
products. Developing countries are not spared from
the impact of the cartel since there is
significant air cargo trade in these regions, part
of which is handled by members of the cartel. The
proportion of exports shipped by air from less
developed regions such as Africa and some parts of
Asia exceeds 10 percent.
Thus,
competition authorities in developing countries
also need to join in and prosecute such
international cartels once they are discovered.
Hamstrung by limited resources and perhaps their
own weak laws, competition authorities in
developing countries should innovate and use
various means to address anticompetitive
practices.
This
could include initiating and enlarging informal
cooperation between authorities in the countries
targeted by the cartel.
The
author is the secretary general of the NGO CUTS
International - Consumer Unity and Trust Society -
and chairman of INCSOC.
This article can also be viewed at:
http://www.shanghaidaily.com/
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