Konkurrens, samarbete och koncentration. Kalkstens- och cementindustrin i Sverige 1871-1982
Abstract
This dissertation examines cartels and cooperation. The literature about cartels and cooperation
is in many ways contradictory; many of the studies that have been made come to different
results. Several of the implications from former research are valid only within their context.
This dissertation takes on different topics in the field of cartel research by investigating cartels
and cooperation in two Swedish industries, Limestone and Cement. The time period of
the study ranges from 1871, when the Cement industry was established in Sweden, to 1982,
when the big cement company Cementa (former Skånska Cement) had monopolized the
two industries.
The industries were different in many aspects, which also affect the forms of cooperation
in the industries. The Cement industry was technologically advanced, capital intensive and
had high entry barriers, the product was homogeneous. The Limestone Industry on the other
hand was neither capital nor technological intensive, the barriers to entry were really low and
the product was not homogeneous. Some of the main findings in the dissertation are that
both external and internal factors matter for the establishment of cartels. The cartels are often
started with a test period, where the companies get to know each other and test the cooperation.
One of the main topics in the dissertation and in the field of cartel research is the link
between cartels and concentration. When comparing the two industries it is clear that the
concentration process and the way cartels worked differed between the industries, due to their
structural diversity. In the Cement industry the concentration process was rather straightforward,
and there was one main cartel controlling the industry. In the Limestone industry the
development was not clear at all, different cartels succeeded each other, and the competition
constantly changed. Both the Cement and the Limestone industry had a variety of forms of
cooperation. The dissertation shows that cartels should not automatically be seen as a counterbalance
to big companies, cartels could as well be a basis for concentration.
The Cement and Limestone industry are investigated through case studies. The case studies
are based on extensive archival studies. The development and the cooperation in the two
industries are compared historically. The effects that the cartels have on price development
and technological development are discussed in the dissertation. The price of Limestone
increased in periods of cartelisation, but overtime the prices was decreasing, especially in the
late period when the advantage from economies of scale was larger. In the Cement industry
the price decreased over time, especially due to declining production costs. One reason for the
declining production costs was the technological development in the industry. A particular
study of the mechanisation process of the quarries in the industries shows that the stabile
cartels in the Cement industry supported the change. But the unstable and unsecure cartels
in the Limestone industry delayed the mechanisation. Cartels could not be seen as one single
phenomenon with the same features and impact everywhere, but instead the question of
cartel is complex.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Handelshögskolan
Institution
Department of Economy and Society ; Institutionen för ekonomi och samhälle
Disputation
Fredagen den 4 september, kl. 10.15, Hörsal Sappören, Sprängkullsgatan 25, Göteborg
Date of defence
2015-09-04
Malin.Dahlstrom@econhist.gu.se
Date
2015-05-20Author
Dahlström, Malin
Keywords
Ekonomisk historia
Cartels
cooperation
monopoly
concentration
competition
cement
limestone
industry
cartel legislation
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-86217-15-0
Series/Report no.
Gothenburg Studies in Economic History
16
Language
swe