This classroom experiment introduces students to the concept of double marginalization, i.e. the exercise of market power at successive vertical layers in a supply chain. By taking on roles of firms, students determine how the mark-ups are set at each successive production stage. They learn that final retail prices tend to be higher than if the firms were vertically integrated. Students compare the welfare implications of two potential solutions to the double marginalization problem: acquisition and franchise fees. The experiment also can stimulate a discussion of two-part tariffs, transfer pricing, contracting, and the Coase theorem.18 page(s
A simple duopoly model is used to show the advantage to a manufacturer of selling his product throug...
The paper explores incentives for strategic vertical separation of firms in a framework of a simple ...
In an industry where naturally monopolistic and competitive activities are vertically related, shoul...
This classroom experiment introduces students to the concept of double marginalization, i.e. the exe...
This paper illustrates the effect of market size on the decision of whether or not firms should vert...
An upstream monopolist that services multiple downstream monopolists has a dual incentive to integra...
The \double-marginalization " problem associated with linear wholesale price contract has long ...
The incentive that an upstream firm has to integrate or to impose vertical restraints arises because...
We describe a classroom experiment that illustrates the concepts of market power and the Lerner Inde...
This experiment demonstrates principles of decision-making in dynamic oligopolies, especially the di...
Economists have long been inquiring into the determinants of vertical integration. Theories which e...
A frequently cited proposition in industrial organization is that vertical integration of bilateral ...
This paper assesses whether vertical integration can help solving the chicken-and-egg coordination p...
This paper illustrates the results of an experiment where students were made to play quantity- -set...
When a two-product monopolist merges with one of its suppliers, thus eliminating the double marginal...
A simple duopoly model is used to show the advantage to a manufacturer of selling his product throug...
The paper explores incentives for strategic vertical separation of firms in a framework of a simple ...
In an industry where naturally monopolistic and competitive activities are vertically related, shoul...
This classroom experiment introduces students to the concept of double marginalization, i.e. the exe...
This paper illustrates the effect of market size on the decision of whether or not firms should vert...
An upstream monopolist that services multiple downstream monopolists has a dual incentive to integra...
The \double-marginalization " problem associated with linear wholesale price contract has long ...
The incentive that an upstream firm has to integrate or to impose vertical restraints arises because...
We describe a classroom experiment that illustrates the concepts of market power and the Lerner Inde...
This experiment demonstrates principles of decision-making in dynamic oligopolies, especially the di...
Economists have long been inquiring into the determinants of vertical integration. Theories which e...
A frequently cited proposition in industrial organization is that vertical integration of bilateral ...
This paper assesses whether vertical integration can help solving the chicken-and-egg coordination p...
This paper illustrates the results of an experiment where students were made to play quantity- -set...
When a two-product monopolist merges with one of its suppliers, thus eliminating the double marginal...
A simple duopoly model is used to show the advantage to a manufacturer of selling his product throug...
The paper explores incentives for strategic vertical separation of firms in a framework of a simple ...
In an industry where naturally monopolistic and competitive activities are vertically related, shoul...