In many recent antitrust cases, manufacturers of complex high-technology equipment have been accused of exercising market power in the sale of proprietary service or parts necessary to maintain the machines they produce. The manufacturer generally concedes that it has market power in selling the aftermarket service or parts, but argues that it would not exercise such power because high aftermarket prices would cause consumers to select a different brand in the competitive market for the original equipment. We study the incentive to exercise market power in aftermarkets when the original equipment market is perfectly competitive, a differentiated duopoly, or monopolized. In all cases, we show that the price in the aftermarket will exceed mar...
I revisit the relation between aftermarket power and basic market competition. I consider an infinit...
In this paper, I show that the standard Bertrand competition argument does not apply when firms comp...
Significant attention has been paid to why a durable-goods producer with little or no market power w...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73365/1/j.1365-2745.1998.00285.x.pd
This paper studies competition among equipment sellers who each monopolize their equipment’s afterma...
This paper investigates \u85rmsabilities to tacitly collude when they each monopolize a proprietary ...
Abstract This paper investigates firms' abilities to tacitly collude when these firms each mono...
This paper investigates \u85rmsabilities to tacitly collude when they each monopolize a proprietary ...
This paper investigates firms' abilities to tacitly collude when they each monopolize a proprietary ...
This paper investigates firms' abilities to tacitly collude when they each monopolize a proprietary ...
Home printers are technological miracles that are supposed to make life easier. However, the costs r...
Consider a monopolist who sells a durable good, and repairs the good if it breaks down. Suppose that...
A number of recent antitrust cases in North America and Europe have involved allegations that manufa...
textThe economics literature has traditionally focused on anticompetitive incentives to explain why ...
textThe economics literature has traditionally focused on anticompetitive incentives to explain why ...
I revisit the relation between aftermarket power and basic market competition. I consider an infinit...
In this paper, I show that the standard Bertrand competition argument does not apply when firms comp...
Significant attention has been paid to why a durable-goods producer with little or no market power w...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73365/1/j.1365-2745.1998.00285.x.pd
This paper studies competition among equipment sellers who each monopolize their equipment’s afterma...
This paper investigates \u85rmsabilities to tacitly collude when they each monopolize a proprietary ...
Abstract This paper investigates firms' abilities to tacitly collude when these firms each mono...
This paper investigates \u85rmsabilities to tacitly collude when they each monopolize a proprietary ...
This paper investigates firms' abilities to tacitly collude when they each monopolize a proprietary ...
This paper investigates firms' abilities to tacitly collude when they each monopolize a proprietary ...
Home printers are technological miracles that are supposed to make life easier. However, the costs r...
Consider a monopolist who sells a durable good, and repairs the good if it breaks down. Suppose that...
A number of recent antitrust cases in North America and Europe have involved allegations that manufa...
textThe economics literature has traditionally focused on anticompetitive incentives to explain why ...
textThe economics literature has traditionally focused on anticompetitive incentives to explain why ...
I revisit the relation between aftermarket power and basic market competition. I consider an infinit...
In this paper, I show that the standard Bertrand competition argument does not apply when firms comp...
Significant attention has been paid to why a durable-goods producer with little or no market power w...