Antitrust authorities often consider parallel pricing and market share stability to be clues of illegal collusion. To analyze whether this inference is correct, I develop a model of price competition with differentiated products in which demand and costs vary over time. In many cases parallel pricing does not distinguish between a competitive and a collusive outcome. However, in some cases perfect parallel pricing is compatible only with a competitive equilibrium, and therefore provides some evidence that firms did not collude. I also show that the competitive equilibrium is characterized by a higher market share stability than a collusive equilibrium.
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...
Coordinated price fixing among firms in an industry remains one of the few practices which is per se...
Cartel detection is usually viewed as a key task of competition authorities. A special case of carte...
Parallel conduct by competing firms is an almost unavoidable phenomenon in the real world. Of course...
Conscious parallelism, sometimes called tacit collusion, occurs where firms adopt their business pra...
Oligopoly industry structure, where a small number of firms dominate a large percentage of the marke...
Oligopoly industry structure, where a small number of firms dominate a large percentage of the marke...
Oligopoly industry structure, where a small number of firms dominate a large percentage of the marke...
Alternative market structures are distinguishable by the degree of parallel action exhibited by prod...
Alternative market structures are distinguishable by the degree of parallel action exhibited by prod...
We consider experimental markets of repeated homogeneous price-setting duopolies. We investigate the...
Alternative market structures are distinguishable by the degree of parallel action exhibited by prod...
Alternative market structures are distinguishable by the degree of parallel action exhibited by prod...
Alternative market structures are distinguishable by the degree of parallel action exhibited by prod...
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...
Coordinated price fixing among firms in an industry remains one of the few practices which is per se...
Cartel detection is usually viewed as a key task of competition authorities. A special case of carte...
Parallel conduct by competing firms is an almost unavoidable phenomenon in the real world. Of course...
Conscious parallelism, sometimes called tacit collusion, occurs where firms adopt their business pra...
Oligopoly industry structure, where a small number of firms dominate a large percentage of the marke...
Oligopoly industry structure, where a small number of firms dominate a large percentage of the marke...
Oligopoly industry structure, where a small number of firms dominate a large percentage of the marke...
Alternative market structures are distinguishable by the degree of parallel action exhibited by prod...
Alternative market structures are distinguishable by the degree of parallel action exhibited by prod...
We consider experimental markets of repeated homogeneous price-setting duopolies. We investigate the...
Alternative market structures are distinguishable by the degree of parallel action exhibited by prod...
Alternative market structures are distinguishable by the degree of parallel action exhibited by prod...
Alternative market structures are distinguishable by the degree of parallel action exhibited by prod...
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...
Coordinated price fixing among firms in an industry remains one of the few practices which is per se...