Considering a vertical structure with perfectly competitive upstream firms that deliver a homogenous good to a differentiated retail duopoly, we show that upstream fixed costs may help to monopolize the downstream market. We find that downstream prices increase in upstream firms'fixed costs when both intra- and interbrand competition exist. Our findings contradict the common wisdom that fixed costs do not affect market outcomes
Assuming that oligopolistic downstream firms take intermediate goods prices as given and that upstre...
Resale price maintenance (RPM), slotting fees, loyalty rebates and other related vertical practices ...
This paper reverses the standard order between input supply negotiations and downstream competition ...
Considering a vertical structure with perfectly competitive upstream firms that deliver a homogenous...
Using typical demand data on differentiated products markets, we show how to identify and estimate v...
This paper reverses the standard order between input supply negotiations and downstream competition ...
We present the first empirical estimation of a structural model taking into account explicitly the e...
This paper examines how the option of a regulated linear input price affects vertical contracting, w...
In intermediate goods markets where there are alternative supply sources, wholesale price discrimin...
Assuming a fixed-proportion downstream production technology, partial forward integration by an upst...
Contrary to the seminal paper of Horn and Wolinsky (1988), we demonstrate that upstream firms, which...
We consider a vertically related market where one quantity setting and another price setting downstr...
Slotting fees are fixed charges paid by food manufacturers to retailers for access to the retail mar...
The earlier studies on the effects of entry in a downstream market where vertically-related and symm...
This is a successive oligopoly model with two brands. Each downstream firm chooses one brand to sell...
Assuming that oligopolistic downstream firms take intermediate goods prices as given and that upstre...
Resale price maintenance (RPM), slotting fees, loyalty rebates and other related vertical practices ...
This paper reverses the standard order between input supply negotiations and downstream competition ...
Considering a vertical structure with perfectly competitive upstream firms that deliver a homogenous...
Using typical demand data on differentiated products markets, we show how to identify and estimate v...
This paper reverses the standard order between input supply negotiations and downstream competition ...
We present the first empirical estimation of a structural model taking into account explicitly the e...
This paper examines how the option of a regulated linear input price affects vertical contracting, w...
In intermediate goods markets where there are alternative supply sources, wholesale price discrimin...
Assuming a fixed-proportion downstream production technology, partial forward integration by an upst...
Contrary to the seminal paper of Horn and Wolinsky (1988), we demonstrate that upstream firms, which...
We consider a vertically related market where one quantity setting and another price setting downstr...
Slotting fees are fixed charges paid by food manufacturers to retailers for access to the retail mar...
The earlier studies on the effects of entry in a downstream market where vertically-related and symm...
This is a successive oligopoly model with two brands. Each downstream firm chooses one brand to sell...
Assuming that oligopolistic downstream firms take intermediate goods prices as given and that upstre...
Resale price maintenance (RPM), slotting fees, loyalty rebates and other related vertical practices ...
This paper reverses the standard order between input supply negotiations and downstream competition ...