‘He who has the gold makes the rules’
I had to go to Sydney airport last week, and needed to park for a while, the plane was late.
It almost required an extension of the limit on my credit card.
It was just another brush with the cost of doing business with someone who has the inside running in a regulated market that I have had the misfortune to tangle with over the last few months. In this case, the airport is a monopoly, that was privatised. Governments seem to think that when they sell off a public asset to the private sector, the buyer will continue to price it at ‘social’ levels. They then act all surprised when the new owner with the regulated monopoly suddenly starts pricing at monopoly levels.
Consider what has happened to your power bills since the ‘privatisation’ process kicked in. Pretty obvious that the sale process included some sort of ring-fencing of competition to beef up the price so the press release looked better, as in the case of the sale of Port Botany and Port Kembla now being brought to court by the ACCC.
Pretty much all markets are regulated to some degree, from a very little to a whole lot, on top of the basics of incorporation, and paying taxes (which seems to be increasingly optional for MNC’s). Adding to the complication, there are three levels of government in this country all regulating different things in different ways creating an alphabet soup of bodies that have to be navigated before you can trade.
In highly regulated markets, it is reasonable to assume that most if not all incumbents will move aggressively and creatively to protect what they have. Claims of public interest, safety, loss of employment, are common, and are generally the reason the monopolies are there in the first place. However, what they have is a position that enables them to charge rent, rather than achieve success through a superior value proposition.
Understanding the structure of the rent seekers business model will help to see ways to invigorate or disrupt it.
The taxi industry is a classic. Around the world it was a regulated market that delivered regulated profits to the few who owned the licences, which therefore accrued a capital value, until Uber came along. Similarly, the milk industry in NSW was regulated until it became unmanageable to continue, and then there was a decade long 10 cents/litre levy to pay down the capital value of the regulated milk runs.
Having an understanding of who has the power in any market, the basis of that power, and the means by which it can be wielded, is vital to the construction of a viable business model and value proposition.
Header Photo credit: courtesy Jason Heller.