This paper considers the private and public incentives for firms to merge in the face of foreign entry. We set up a standard linear Cournot model of competition within a country and consider the gains to two merging firms and to national welfare in a series of scenarios: homogeneous and heterogeneous firms with and without synergies from mergers. We look first at optimal domestic firm numbers from a social welfare perspective and then consider private and social incentives for mergers. With heterogeneous firms and when synergies can occur, greater foreign entry tends to enhance both private and public incentives for domestic mergers. These results suggest that policymakers have no cause to doubt the intentions of firms seeking to merge: whe...
A two-country model of oligopoly in general equilibrium is used to show how changes in market struct...
The suspicion that national governments were in various forms promoting or defending domestic nation...
We use a simple framework where firms in two countries serve their respec-tive domestic markets and ...
We consider private and public incentives for domestic firms to merge in the face of foreign entry. ...
This paper uses a simple oligopoly model to examine welfare implications of domestic mergers and for...
We examine the effects of mergers on Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), and on shaping national polici...
Information asymmetry creates incentives for firms from different countries to merge. To demonstrate...
This paper studies incentives for national mergers in a three-country partial equilibrium model wher...
This paper studies the impact of firm cost and market size asymmetries on merger decisions. I consid...
This paper studies the impact of firm cost and market size asymmetries on merger decisions. I consid...
This paper studies the impact of firm and market size asymmetries on merger decisions. To do that I ...
This paper identifies the unique strategic issues of cross-border mergers in a mixed oligopoly showi...
In a three-country model, this paper investigates linkages between merger incentives of exporting fi...
In this paper we consider whether a movement towards freer international trade generates incentives ...
International audienceThis paper analyzes mergers incentives in an asymmetric mixed oligopoly consis...
A two-country model of oligopoly in general equilibrium is used to show how changes in market struct...
The suspicion that national governments were in various forms promoting or defending domestic nation...
We use a simple framework where firms in two countries serve their respec-tive domestic markets and ...
We consider private and public incentives for domestic firms to merge in the face of foreign entry. ...
This paper uses a simple oligopoly model to examine welfare implications of domestic mergers and for...
We examine the effects of mergers on Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), and on shaping national polici...
Information asymmetry creates incentives for firms from different countries to merge. To demonstrate...
This paper studies incentives for national mergers in a three-country partial equilibrium model wher...
This paper studies the impact of firm cost and market size asymmetries on merger decisions. I consid...
This paper studies the impact of firm cost and market size asymmetries on merger decisions. I consid...
This paper studies the impact of firm and market size asymmetries on merger decisions. To do that I ...
This paper identifies the unique strategic issues of cross-border mergers in a mixed oligopoly showi...
In a three-country model, this paper investigates linkages between merger incentives of exporting fi...
In this paper we consider whether a movement towards freer international trade generates incentives ...
International audienceThis paper analyzes mergers incentives in an asymmetric mixed oligopoly consis...
A two-country model of oligopoly in general equilibrium is used to show how changes in market struct...
The suspicion that national governments were in various forms promoting or defending domestic nation...
We use a simple framework where firms in two countries serve their respec-tive domestic markets and ...