Antitrust authorities all over the world are concerned if a particularly aggressive competitor, a "maverick", is bought out of the market. Yet there is a lack of theoretical justification. One plausible determinant of acting as a maverick is behavioral: the maverick derives utility from acting competitively. We test this conjecture in the lab. In a pretest, we classify participants by their social value orientation. Individuals who are rivalistic in an allocation task indeed bid more aggressively in a laboratory oligopoly market. This disciplines incumbents. In our setting, this does not create sufficient incentives for buying out mavericks, though
textabstractThis paper develops one possible argument why auctioning licenses to op- erate in an aft...
Predatory pricing—a deliberate strategy of pricing aggressively in order to eliminate competitors—is...
Legal scholars have recently advanced a behavioral approach to the law and economics school of thoug...
Antitrust authorities all over the world are concerned if a particularly aggressive competitor, a "m...
Antitrust authorities all over the world are keen on the presence of a particularly aggressive compe...
The book identifies conditions for trust and cooperation. It highlights unintended consequences of i...
One of the core assumptions of the traditional economic approach to antitrust law is that competitor...
Shortly after taking office, President Barack Obama announced that his Administration would pursue a...
This paper develops one possible argument why auctioning licenses to op-erate in an aftermarket may ...
Predatory pricing—a deliberate strategy of pricing aggressively in order to eliminate competitors—is...
We conducted a framed field experiment on eBay, and examined to what extent both social and competit...
We study the anticompetitive effects of predatory pricing and the efficacy of three policy responses...
Competition policy is entering a new age. Interest in competition laws has increased world-wide, and...
We study whether firms’ collusive ability influences their incentives to merge: when tacit collusion...
Antitrust law has long been concerned that the loss of a firm, through merger or exclusion, may impr...
textabstractThis paper develops one possible argument why auctioning licenses to op- erate in an aft...
Predatory pricing—a deliberate strategy of pricing aggressively in order to eliminate competitors—is...
Legal scholars have recently advanced a behavioral approach to the law and economics school of thoug...
Antitrust authorities all over the world are concerned if a particularly aggressive competitor, a "m...
Antitrust authorities all over the world are keen on the presence of a particularly aggressive compe...
The book identifies conditions for trust and cooperation. It highlights unintended consequences of i...
One of the core assumptions of the traditional economic approach to antitrust law is that competitor...
Shortly after taking office, President Barack Obama announced that his Administration would pursue a...
This paper develops one possible argument why auctioning licenses to op-erate in an aftermarket may ...
Predatory pricing—a deliberate strategy of pricing aggressively in order to eliminate competitors—is...
We conducted a framed field experiment on eBay, and examined to what extent both social and competit...
We study the anticompetitive effects of predatory pricing and the efficacy of three policy responses...
Competition policy is entering a new age. Interest in competition laws has increased world-wide, and...
We study whether firms’ collusive ability influences their incentives to merge: when tacit collusion...
Antitrust law has long been concerned that the loss of a firm, through merger or exclusion, may impr...
textabstractThis paper develops one possible argument why auctioning licenses to op- erate in an aft...
Predatory pricing—a deliberate strategy of pricing aggressively in order to eliminate competitors—is...
Legal scholars have recently advanced a behavioral approach to the law and economics school of thoug...