From excerpt from Forbes Magazine on how John Gokongwei owned Cebu Pacific [PSE: CEB] grabbed the airline industry tiara from Lucio Tan’s Philippine Airlines [PSE: PAL]. (emphasis mine)
It was Lance's father, legendary ragsto- riches entrepreneur John Gokongwei Jr., who had the idea to start Cebu Pacific. John, now 84, sits atop JG Summit Holdings, one of the Philippines' largest conglomerates, and a family fortune that FORBES ASIA pegged at $1.5 billion last year. His interest in aviation was piqued after reading about U.S. discounter Southwest Airlines at the same time the Philippine government decided to open up the airline industry. But Lance believes there was another layer to his father's interest: "About a year before we bid for PAL and lost. So when deregulation came up, well, my dad loves challenging monopolies."
Read more here
Monopolies, which signify as government privileges, operate on principles of anti-competition. This implies that monopolies are fundamentally inefficient, are driven by political goals and irresponsive to consumer demands which all add up to say that monopolies are slow to adapt to the changes in the marketplace.
And so when industries once dominated by monopolies are deregulated, this ‘chink in the armor’ becomes exposed. In a newly deregulated environment, entrepreneurs should pounce on the opportunities to challenge government monopolies as the Gokongwei’s did.
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