The Japanese Fair Trade Commission has finally done what many economists have been screaming for: it raided the headquarters of four major ice cream manufacturers on suspicion of price-fixing. The allegations, if proven, would confirm what any sceptic of corporate collusion already suspected. When markets are left to the mercy of a handful of players, the consumer always pays the price. Literally.
The companies in question: Morinaga Milk Industry, Meiji Holdings, Lotte, and Ezaki Glico. These are not small players. They control the vast majority of Japan’s ice cream market. The JFTC alleges they colluded to fix prices on ice cream products sold to convenience stores. The result? Higher prices for a summer treat that, in a functioning market, should be driven by competition and innovation.
Why does this matter? Because price-fixing is the most egregious violation of market principles. It is a direct tax on consumers, orchestrated by corporate executives who should know better. In a low-growth economy like Japan’s, where deflation has been the bugbear for decades, such collusion is particularly damaging. It distorts the inflation signal that central bankers rely on. If the BOJ thinks prices are rising due to demand, when in fact it is due to collusion, it may tighten policy prematurely. That would be a disaster.
But there is a deeper lesson here about corporate culture. For years, Japan has been plagued by a cosy relationship between big business and regulators. This raid suggests a new era of enforcement. The JFTC has been emboldened by recent reforms. This is good news. But it raises a question: how widespread is this behaviour? If a handful of ice cream firms can collude, what about other sectors? The petrochemical industry? The banks? The broken windows of market manipulation are everywhere.
Capital flight is a real risk if Japan’s corporate governance remains opaque. International investors, whom Japan desperately needs to finance its debt, demand transparency. A price-fixing scandal in ice cream might seem trivial, but it signals a systemic problem. If you cannot trust the price of a choc-ice, how can you trust the price of a bond?
Gilt yields in Japan remain artificially low due to BOJ intervention. But if corporate misbehaviour erodes investor confidence, we could see a sudden spike in yields. That would be painful for a government with a debt-to-GDP ratio over 250%. The ice cream raid is thus a reminder that fiscal responsibility starts with honest markets.
What should happen next? Heavy fines. Individual culpability. Jail time for executives if criminal conduct is found. The message must be that collusion will not be tolerated. Japan’s economy cannot afford the luxury of corporate cartels. The country needs more competition, more innovation, less red tape, and fewer cosy handshakes.
For now, the ice cream giants are licking their wounds. But the real test is whether the JFTC has the stomach to follow through. Let us hope they do. Otherwise, the only flavour we will taste is the bitterness of wasted opportunity.









