
ISET ეკონომისტი

No, nothing about the election here. Instead something about the Georgian retail gasoline market, which according to some is not so competitive. A case in point is this article on an opposition (soon government) leaning news outlet that alleges price-fixing in the Georgian retail gasoline market. The article is based on a recent study by Transparency Georgia. A study with some interesting data, but apparently it was all too much for a clueless (or partisan) journalist. But let’s discuss the study itself.
Transparency Georgia finds that:
All this is seen by Transparency Georgia as evidence in support of the hypothesis that firms in the Georgian retail gasoline market are cooperating and fixing prices.
And indeed it looks and sounds fishy. Or maybe not:
* I have doubts about this result. The time series is rather short and nothing in the study suggests that this result is based on rigorous analysis of the price transmission mechanism or a statistical test for asymmetry.