One existing distributor controls the existing access to end users. There are one incumbent producer and one potential entrant, both with a potential for bypassing the distributor. We find that the distributor always signs a contract with the producer that leads to the highets industry profits, a choice that can be detrimental to welfare. The contracting producer earns more than the profit it would have earned if it bypassed. We show how the contracting producer's profit is influenced by (1) its market share if it had bypassed, (2) the rivalry it would have triggered if bypassing, and (3) the rival producer's costs of bypassing
When is inducing intrabrand competition (via nonexclusive distribution) an optimal strategy? To addr...
We show that under some conditions, quantity discounts and two-part tariffs are equivalent as mechan...
When is inducing intrabrand competition (via nonexclusive distribution) an optimal strategy? To addr...
One existing distributor controls the existing access to end users. There are one incumbent producer...
I revisit supplier encroachment under the framework of a two-part tariff contract. When a monopoly m...
A seminal work by Fumagalli and Motta (2006) explored that an incumbent manufacturer cannot deter an...
The existing literature about exclusive dealing contracts has focused on cases where an incumbent ma...
This paper examines the effects of exclusive dealing contracts in a simple model with manufacturers-...
A production process involves a major shareholder and two privately informed agents, a marketing div...
We analyze a supply chain consisting of a supplier and a retailer. The supplier's unit production co...
We analyze the competitive effects of vertical contracts in a contracting situation where rival reta...
We analyze vertical contracting between a manufacturer and retailers who have correlated private inf...
When is having no previous contract better than having one, if ever? When should a manufacturer/reta...
This article investigates how the use of contracts that condition discounts on the share a supplier ...
This paper studies revenue-sharing contracts in distribution chains in the presence of win-win condi...
When is inducing intrabrand competition (via nonexclusive distribution) an optimal strategy? To addr...
We show that under some conditions, quantity discounts and two-part tariffs are equivalent as mechan...
When is inducing intrabrand competition (via nonexclusive distribution) an optimal strategy? To addr...
One existing distributor controls the existing access to end users. There are one incumbent producer...
I revisit supplier encroachment under the framework of a two-part tariff contract. When a monopoly m...
A seminal work by Fumagalli and Motta (2006) explored that an incumbent manufacturer cannot deter an...
The existing literature about exclusive dealing contracts has focused on cases where an incumbent ma...
This paper examines the effects of exclusive dealing contracts in a simple model with manufacturers-...
A production process involves a major shareholder and two privately informed agents, a marketing div...
We analyze a supply chain consisting of a supplier and a retailer. The supplier's unit production co...
We analyze the competitive effects of vertical contracts in a contracting situation where rival reta...
We analyze vertical contracting between a manufacturer and retailers who have correlated private inf...
When is having no previous contract better than having one, if ever? When should a manufacturer/reta...
This article investigates how the use of contracts that condition discounts on the share a supplier ...
This paper studies revenue-sharing contracts in distribution chains in the presence of win-win condi...
When is inducing intrabrand competition (via nonexclusive distribution) an optimal strategy? To addr...
We show that under some conditions, quantity discounts and two-part tariffs are equivalent as mechan...
When is inducing intrabrand competition (via nonexclusive distribution) an optimal strategy? To addr...