This papers studies the effects on service quality and consumer surplus of a minimum price which is fixed by a bureaucratic non-monopolistic professional association. It shows that the price set by a Niskanen-type professional assocation will maximize consumer surplus only if consumers demand the highest possible average quality. If consumers demand services of lesser quality, the association?s price will be too high if measured by consumer surplus. Moreover we show that a de-regulated market will always reproduce the favourable result of a uniformly high price in the case of top quality demand while delivering superior results in the case of a mixed demand for high and low quality services.Liberal professions, price regulation, quality, pr...
This article examines the impacts of publishing quality indicators in publicly financed service mark...
Abstract: We compare certification to a minimum quality standard (MQS) policy in a duopolistic indus...
Competitive professional regulation would lead to lower costs for consumers, argues Krystian Seibert...
Liberal professions, Price regulation, Quality, Professional association, Self-regulation, EU compet...
Public concern has been rising about whether market forces are sufficient to ensure the optimal choi...
The question of the optimal trade-off between quality and price has become increasingly important as...
We show in a simple model of entry with sunk cost, that a regulator is best advised to limit the out...
We study incentives for quality provision in markets where providers are motivated (semi-altruistic)...
This paper aims at analysing the behaviour of sellers in a market for an experience good where it is...
Many competition policy issues in regulated industries concern the structure of prices charged by mu...
This paper aims at analysing the behaviour of sellers in a market for an experience good where it is...
This paper revisits the issue of the regulatory choice between a mandatory label and a minimum-quali...
We model the introduction of a minimum quality standard in a vertically differentiated duopoly. We e...
We compare certification to a minimum quality standard (MQS) policy in a duopolistic industry where ...
Professions such as doctors and lawyers often enjoy some degree of self-regulation, i.e. they can se...
This article examines the impacts of publishing quality indicators in publicly financed service mark...
Abstract: We compare certification to a minimum quality standard (MQS) policy in a duopolistic indus...
Competitive professional regulation would lead to lower costs for consumers, argues Krystian Seibert...
Liberal professions, Price regulation, Quality, Professional association, Self-regulation, EU compet...
Public concern has been rising about whether market forces are sufficient to ensure the optimal choi...
The question of the optimal trade-off between quality and price has become increasingly important as...
We show in a simple model of entry with sunk cost, that a regulator is best advised to limit the out...
We study incentives for quality provision in markets where providers are motivated (semi-altruistic)...
This paper aims at analysing the behaviour of sellers in a market for an experience good where it is...
Many competition policy issues in regulated industries concern the structure of prices charged by mu...
This paper aims at analysing the behaviour of sellers in a market for an experience good where it is...
This paper revisits the issue of the regulatory choice between a mandatory label and a minimum-quali...
We model the introduction of a minimum quality standard in a vertically differentiated duopoly. We e...
We compare certification to a minimum quality standard (MQS) policy in a duopolistic industry where ...
Professions such as doctors and lawyers often enjoy some degree of self-regulation, i.e. they can se...
This article examines the impacts of publishing quality indicators in publicly financed service mark...
Abstract: We compare certification to a minimum quality standard (MQS) policy in a duopolistic indus...
Competitive professional regulation would lead to lower costs for consumers, argues Krystian Seibert...