Conventionally, we think of an increase in competition as weakly decreasing prices, increasing the number of consumers served, thus increasing consumer surplus, decreasing firms profits, etc. Here, we demonstrate that, under some tame circumstances, an increase in competition may lead to a price increase in a horizontally differentiated market. We show this relationship for the petrol market in German cities
We consider the two-stage game proposed by Kreps and Scheinkman (83) in the address-model of horizon...
International audienceIn a Hotelling's duopoly with a general transportation cost function, we study...
We examine the relation between consumer search and equilibrium prices when collusion is endogenousl...
Conventionally, we think of an increase in competition as weakly decreasing prices, increasing the n...
Conventionally, we think of an increase in competition as weakly decreasing prices, increasing the n...
When price dispersion is prevalent, a relevant question is what happens to the whole distribution of...
In a spatial competition model, changes in firms’ competitive behaviour may occur when the hypothesi...
We combine Hotelling’s model of product differentiation with tie-in sales. Tie-in sales condition th...
We study competition in markets with significant transport costs and capacity constraints. We compar...
We make a case for price-increasing competition on “competitive bottleneck” two-sided markets. Unlik...
I present a model of competition between two market makers who are horizontally differentiated. I fi...
This paper analyzes price competition in a duopoly market in which products are both horizontally an...
We study a class of differentiation games à la Hotelling. Two firms choose a price and a location in...
The objective of our approach is to develop a model which captures horizontal product differentiatio...
In a discrete choice model of product differentiation, the symmetric duopoly price may be lower than...
We consider the two-stage game proposed by Kreps and Scheinkman (83) in the address-model of horizon...
International audienceIn a Hotelling's duopoly with a general transportation cost function, we study...
We examine the relation between consumer search and equilibrium prices when collusion is endogenousl...
Conventionally, we think of an increase in competition as weakly decreasing prices, increasing the n...
Conventionally, we think of an increase in competition as weakly decreasing prices, increasing the n...
When price dispersion is prevalent, a relevant question is what happens to the whole distribution of...
In a spatial competition model, changes in firms’ competitive behaviour may occur when the hypothesi...
We combine Hotelling’s model of product differentiation with tie-in sales. Tie-in sales condition th...
We study competition in markets with significant transport costs and capacity constraints. We compar...
We make a case for price-increasing competition on “competitive bottleneck” two-sided markets. Unlik...
I present a model of competition between two market makers who are horizontally differentiated. I fi...
This paper analyzes price competition in a duopoly market in which products are both horizontally an...
We study a class of differentiation games à la Hotelling. Two firms choose a price and a location in...
The objective of our approach is to develop a model which captures horizontal product differentiatio...
In a discrete choice model of product differentiation, the symmetric duopoly price may be lower than...
We consider the two-stage game proposed by Kreps and Scheinkman (83) in the address-model of horizon...
International audienceIn a Hotelling's duopoly with a general transportation cost function, we study...
We examine the relation between consumer search and equilibrium prices when collusion is endogenousl...