This note considers the reputation phenomenon in the context of the Chain-Store Paradox. Two major aspects of the perfect information assumption are relaxed: potential entrants do not know the ordering in which they have to make their entry decisions and they do not have full knowledge of the past history of the market. It is shown that, without introducing private information or changing the nature of the conflict, there exist sequential equilibria of the game with imperfect information in which the monopolist is willing to build reputation
Economic models of reputation make strong assumptions about the information available to players. I...
Trockel W. The Chain-Store Paradox Revisited. Theory and Decision. 1986;21(2):163-179
In this note we develop a pure hidden action model of reputation and repeated Bertrand competition, ...
In this paper we consider the sequential equilibrium of multistage chainstore games with imperfect i...
This article analyses the role of information in building reputation in an investment/trust game. Th...
We study the interaction of competition and reputation as e¢-ciency enhancing mechanisms in environm...
In duopoly games with asymmetric demand information, the firm which knows true demand function has a...
For many years, most scholars have assumed that the strength of reputational incentives is positivel...
SIGLEAvailable from Bibliothek des Instituts fuer Weltwirtschaft, ZBW, Duesternbrook Weg 120, D-2410...
This dissertation consists of three essays on reputations and dynamic games. I investigate how incom...
This dissertation consists of three essays on games with incomplete information. Among many issues t...
The thesis of this paper is that finite, noncooperative games possessing both complete and perfect i...
Economic models of reputation make strong assumptions about the information available to players.� I...
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/01651765. Reprinted from Economics Letters, 97, Kjell H...
Previous works on asymmetric information in asset markets tend to focus on the potential gains in th...
Economic models of reputation make strong assumptions about the information available to players. I...
Trockel W. The Chain-Store Paradox Revisited. Theory and Decision. 1986;21(2):163-179
In this note we develop a pure hidden action model of reputation and repeated Bertrand competition, ...
In this paper we consider the sequential equilibrium of multistage chainstore games with imperfect i...
This article analyses the role of information in building reputation in an investment/trust game. Th...
We study the interaction of competition and reputation as e¢-ciency enhancing mechanisms in environm...
In duopoly games with asymmetric demand information, the firm which knows true demand function has a...
For many years, most scholars have assumed that the strength of reputational incentives is positivel...
SIGLEAvailable from Bibliothek des Instituts fuer Weltwirtschaft, ZBW, Duesternbrook Weg 120, D-2410...
This dissertation consists of three essays on reputations and dynamic games. I investigate how incom...
This dissertation consists of three essays on games with incomplete information. Among many issues t...
The thesis of this paper is that finite, noncooperative games possessing both complete and perfect i...
Economic models of reputation make strong assumptions about the information available to players.� I...
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/01651765. Reprinted from Economics Letters, 97, Kjell H...
Previous works on asymmetric information in asset markets tend to focus on the potential gains in th...
Economic models of reputation make strong assumptions about the information available to players. I...
Trockel W. The Chain-Store Paradox Revisited. Theory and Decision. 1986;21(2):163-179
In this note we develop a pure hidden action model of reputation and repeated Bertrand competition, ...