We consider a model of a market for differentiated goods in which firms are located in marketplaces e.g., shopping malls or platforms. There are search frictions between marketplaces, but not within. Marketplaces differ in size. We show that an equilibrium in which consumers start their search at the largest marketplace and continue in the descending order of size, always exists. Despite charging lower prices, firms in larger marketplaces earn higher profits. Under free entry, all firms cluster in one marketplace provided that search frictions are large enough. If a marketplace determines the price of entry, then the equilibrium marketplace size is a single-peaked function of search costs and is decreasing for most of the search cost range
The Stahl model is one of the most applied consumer search models, with many applications and an emp...
Firms compete by choosing both a price and a design from a family of designs that can be represented...
Retail trade absorbs vast scarce resources because the physical process of trading is time con-sumin...
We consider a model of a market for differentiated goods in which firms are located in marketplaces ...
A puzzling feature of many retail markets is the coexistence of large multiproduct firms and smaller...
A puzzling feature of many retail markets is the coexistence of large multiproduct firms and smaller...
We analyze the contracting problem between a shopping mall and potential anchors (large stores) in a...
Empirical evidence suggests that most firms operate in imperfectly competitivemarkets. We develop a ...
This paper studies a model in which consumers search among multiple competing firms for products tha...
Abstract: In this paper I investigate whether, in market equilibrium, one observes price dispersion ...
This paper studies a model in which consumers search among multiple competing firms for products tha...
textabstractDespite the mixed empirical evidence, many economists still hold to the view that Intern...
The Stahl model is one of the most applied consumer search models, with many applications and an em...
This paper studies a bargaining model of equilibrium price distributions. Consumers choose a seller ...
I study the location choice of competing shops. A shop can either be isolated or join a mall. A frac...
The Stahl model is one of the most applied consumer search models, with many applications and an emp...
Firms compete by choosing both a price and a design from a family of designs that can be represented...
Retail trade absorbs vast scarce resources because the physical process of trading is time con-sumin...
We consider a model of a market for differentiated goods in which firms are located in marketplaces ...
A puzzling feature of many retail markets is the coexistence of large multiproduct firms and smaller...
A puzzling feature of many retail markets is the coexistence of large multiproduct firms and smaller...
We analyze the contracting problem between a shopping mall and potential anchors (large stores) in a...
Empirical evidence suggests that most firms operate in imperfectly competitivemarkets. We develop a ...
This paper studies a model in which consumers search among multiple competing firms for products tha...
Abstract: In this paper I investigate whether, in market equilibrium, one observes price dispersion ...
This paper studies a model in which consumers search among multiple competing firms for products tha...
textabstractDespite the mixed empirical evidence, many economists still hold to the view that Intern...
The Stahl model is one of the most applied consumer search models, with many applications and an em...
This paper studies a bargaining model of equilibrium price distributions. Consumers choose a seller ...
I study the location choice of competing shops. A shop can either be isolated or join a mall. A frac...
The Stahl model is one of the most applied consumer search models, with many applications and an emp...
Firms compete by choosing both a price and a design from a family of designs that can be represented...
Retail trade absorbs vast scarce resources because the physical process of trading is time con-sumin...