Abstract of associated article: We experimentally study the effect of information about competitors’ actions on cartel stability and firms’ incentives to form cartels in Cournot markets. As in previous experiments, markets become very competitive when individualized information is available and participants cannot communicate. In contrast, when communication is possible, results reverse: markets become less competitive and cartels become more stable when individualized information is available. We also observe that the extra profits that firms obtain thanks to the possibility to communicate are higher when individualized information is present, suggesting that firms have greater incentives to form cartels in that situation
This paper reports the results of a block of experiments designed to analyze the effects of informat...
Chapter prepared for publication in Oxford Handbook on International Antitrust Economics, Roger D. B...
In a differentiated oligopoly model with free entry, the static welfare loss from collusion is large...
Abstract of associated article: We experimentally study the effect of information about competitors’...
This thesis consists of three independent essays that use laboratory experiments to address a number...
This paper investigates the impact the publication of firm-specific data has on the competitiveness ...
We review the experimental literature on collusion, focusing in particular on the roles of informati...
With this research we examine whether observing firm-specific production levels leads to a less comp...
We study the role of communication in collusive market sharing. In a series of Cournot oligopoly exp...
This study conducts experiments to determine the modes of communication that are able to produce and...
This study conducts experiments to determine the modes of communication that are able to produce and...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in thi...
In some industries firms share information about demand and costs. Information sharing may facilitat...
This paper studies a symmetric Bertrand duopoly with imperfect monitoring where firms receive noisy ...
Collusion is when firms coordinate on suppressing competition, and coordination typically requires t...
This paper reports the results of a block of experiments designed to analyze the effects of informat...
Chapter prepared for publication in Oxford Handbook on International Antitrust Economics, Roger D. B...
In a differentiated oligopoly model with free entry, the static welfare loss from collusion is large...
Abstract of associated article: We experimentally study the effect of information about competitors’...
This thesis consists of three independent essays that use laboratory experiments to address a number...
This paper investigates the impact the publication of firm-specific data has on the competitiveness ...
We review the experimental literature on collusion, focusing in particular on the roles of informati...
With this research we examine whether observing firm-specific production levels leads to a less comp...
We study the role of communication in collusive market sharing. In a series of Cournot oligopoly exp...
This study conducts experiments to determine the modes of communication that are able to produce and...
This study conducts experiments to determine the modes of communication that are able to produce and...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in thi...
In some industries firms share information about demand and costs. Information sharing may facilitat...
This paper studies a symmetric Bertrand duopoly with imperfect monitoring where firms receive noisy ...
Collusion is when firms coordinate on suppressing competition, and coordination typically requires t...
This paper reports the results of a block of experiments designed to analyze the effects of informat...
Chapter prepared for publication in Oxford Handbook on International Antitrust Economics, Roger D. B...
In a differentiated oligopoly model with free entry, the static welfare loss from collusion is large...