While the theoretical industrial organization literature has long argued that excess capacity can be used to deter entry into markets, there is little empirical evidence that incumbent firms effectively behave in this way. Bagwell and Ramey (1996) propose a game with a specific sequence of moves and partially-recoverable capacity costs in which forward induction provides a theoretical rationalization for firm behavior in the field. We conduct an experiment with a game inspired by their work. In our data the incumbent tends to keep the market, in contrast to what the forward induction argument of Bagwell and Ramey would suggest. The results indicate that players perceive that the first mover has an advantage without having to pre-commit capa...
In Stackelberg-like games there is an advantage of moving first. However, Bagwell (1995) shows that...
Coordination behavior is studied experimentally in a class of noncooperative market entry games feat...
"Winner-Take-All"-markets, i.e. markets in which the relative and not the absolute performance is de...
While the theoretical industrial organization literature has long argued that excess capacity can be...
While the theoretical industrial organization literature has long argued that excess capacity can be...
While the theoretical industrial organization literature has long argued that excess capacity can be...
Forward induction and entry deterrence: an experiment Abstract The Dixit (Econ J 90:95–106, 1980) hy...
The Dixit (Econ J 90:95–106, 1980) hypothesis that incumbents use investment in capacity to deter po...
This paper introduces a continuous-time game to study two ex ante identical firms ’ incentives in ca...
This paper analyzes the properties of three capacity games in an oligopolistic market with Cournot p...
This paper analyzes the properties of three capacity games in an oligopolis-tic market with Cournot ...
We focus on a class of market entry games in which a newly emergent market opportunity may be fruitf...
This dissertation considers organizational problems of market entry. The research follows the experi...
This paper reports the results of a laboratory experiment that examines the strategic effect of forw...
The authors report experiments on how players select among multiple Pareto-ranked equilibria in a co...
In Stackelberg-like games there is an advantage of moving first. However, Bagwell (1995) shows that...
Coordination behavior is studied experimentally in a class of noncooperative market entry games feat...
"Winner-Take-All"-markets, i.e. markets in which the relative and not the absolute performance is de...
While the theoretical industrial organization literature has long argued that excess capacity can be...
While the theoretical industrial organization literature has long argued that excess capacity can be...
While the theoretical industrial organization literature has long argued that excess capacity can be...
Forward induction and entry deterrence: an experiment Abstract The Dixit (Econ J 90:95–106, 1980) hy...
The Dixit (Econ J 90:95–106, 1980) hypothesis that incumbents use investment in capacity to deter po...
This paper introduces a continuous-time game to study two ex ante identical firms ’ incentives in ca...
This paper analyzes the properties of three capacity games in an oligopolistic market with Cournot p...
This paper analyzes the properties of three capacity games in an oligopolis-tic market with Cournot ...
We focus on a class of market entry games in which a newly emergent market opportunity may be fruitf...
This dissertation considers organizational problems of market entry. The research follows the experi...
This paper reports the results of a laboratory experiment that examines the strategic effect of forw...
The authors report experiments on how players select among multiple Pareto-ranked equilibria in a co...
In Stackelberg-like games there is an advantage of moving first. However, Bagwell (1995) shows that...
Coordination behavior is studied experimentally in a class of noncooperative market entry games feat...
"Winner-Take-All"-markets, i.e. markets in which the relative and not the absolute performance is de...