Unlawful collusion is when firms have a mutual understanding to coordinate their behavior for the purpose of achieving a supracompetitive outcome. Given the legal focus on mutual beliefs, this paper explores the role of mutual beliefs in producing collusion. Focusing on price leadership, firms are assumed to commonly believe that price increases will be at least matched but lack any shared understanding about who will lead, when they will, and at what prices. Sufficient conditions are derived which ensure that supracompetitive prices emerge. However, price is bounded below the maximal equilibrium price
In an infinitely repeated game where market demand is uncertain and where firms with (possibly asymm...
Collusive agreements are the most attractive topic in the industrial economics. Tacit collusions of ...
Abstract. This note comments on Feuerstein’s (Feuerstein, Switgard, BCollusion in industrial economi...
Unlawful collusion is when \u85rms have a mutual understanding to coordinate their behavior for the ...
Unlawful collusion is when firms have a mutual understanding to coordinate their behavior for the pu...
Proving that firms have violated Section 1 of the Sherman Act requires showing that they have a mee...
Proving that firms have violated Section 1 of the Sherman Act requires showing that they have a &quo...
Proving that firms have violated Section 1 of the Sherman Act requires showing that they have a &quo...
Proving that firms have violated Section 1 of the Sherman Act requires showing that they have a mee...
Coordinated price fixing among firms in an industry remains one of the few practices which is per se...
Coordinated price fixing among firms in an industry remains one of the few practices which is per se...
Collusion can profitably be classified into three distinct types. In our classification, Type I co...
In an infinitely repeated game where market demand is uncertain and where firms with (possibly asymm...
Recent work in game theory has shown that, in principle, it may be possible for firms in an industry...
In an infinitely repeated game where market demand is uncertain and where firms with (possibly asymm...
In an infinitely repeated game where market demand is uncertain and where firms with (possibly asymm...
Collusive agreements are the most attractive topic in the industrial economics. Tacit collusions of ...
Abstract. This note comments on Feuerstein’s (Feuerstein, Switgard, BCollusion in industrial economi...
Unlawful collusion is when \u85rms have a mutual understanding to coordinate their behavior for the ...
Unlawful collusion is when firms have a mutual understanding to coordinate their behavior for the pu...
Proving that firms have violated Section 1 of the Sherman Act requires showing that they have a mee...
Proving that firms have violated Section 1 of the Sherman Act requires showing that they have a &quo...
Proving that firms have violated Section 1 of the Sherman Act requires showing that they have a &quo...
Proving that firms have violated Section 1 of the Sherman Act requires showing that they have a mee...
Coordinated price fixing among firms in an industry remains one of the few practices which is per se...
Coordinated price fixing among firms in an industry remains one of the few practices which is per se...
Collusion can profitably be classified into three distinct types. In our classification, Type I co...
In an infinitely repeated game where market demand is uncertain and where firms with (possibly asymm...
Recent work in game theory has shown that, in principle, it may be possible for firms in an industry...
In an infinitely repeated game where market demand is uncertain and where firms with (possibly asymm...
In an infinitely repeated game where market demand is uncertain and where firms with (possibly asymm...
Collusive agreements are the most attractive topic in the industrial economics. Tacit collusions of ...
Abstract. This note comments on Feuerstein’s (Feuerstein, Switgard, BCollusion in industrial economi...