Recent empirical evidence suggests that prices for some goods and services are higher in larger markets. This paper provides a demand-side explanation for this phenomenon when firms can choose how much to differentiate their products in a model of monopolistic competition with horizontal product differentiation. The model proposes that consumers’ love of variety makes them more sensitive to product differentiation efforts by firms, which leads to higher prices in larger markets. At the same time, endogenous product differentiation modeled in this way can lead to a positive and concave relationship between market size and entry.Endogenous Technology; Entry; Market Size Effect; International Trade; Monopolistic Competition
In this paper I develop a model of international duopoly, where firms invest in product differentiat...
This article analyses how product differentiation affects the volume of trade under duopoly using Sh...
The purpose of this paper is to explain the puzzling empirical observa-tion by Mayer and Ottaviano (...
In a discrete choice model of product differentiation, the symmetric duopoly price may be lower than...
Abstract This paper studies the effects of market enlargement in the context of monopolistic competi...
This paper argues that product differentiation is compatible with perfect competition under free ent...
Textbook wisdom says that competition yields lower prices and higher consumer surplus than monopoly....
This research considers the problem of a price-discriminating monopolist aiming at choosing output ...
This research considers the problem of a price-discriminating monopolist aiming at choosing output a...
This paper endogenizes both market transparency and product differentiation in a model of informativ...
We introduce a class of “increasing elasticity of substitution” preferences in a monopolistic compet...
We analyse a firm's investment decision in a regional economy composed of two countries. The firm al...
AbstractWe examine the impact of market size difference on the government R&D policies to provide st...
Building on the current theory of industrial concentration, we analyze the relation between market ...
In this note, we analyze the equilibrium outcomes of pricing games with product differentiation in r...
In this paper I develop a model of international duopoly, where firms invest in product differentiat...
This article analyses how product differentiation affects the volume of trade under duopoly using Sh...
The purpose of this paper is to explain the puzzling empirical observa-tion by Mayer and Ottaviano (...
In a discrete choice model of product differentiation, the symmetric duopoly price may be lower than...
Abstract This paper studies the effects of market enlargement in the context of monopolistic competi...
This paper argues that product differentiation is compatible with perfect competition under free ent...
Textbook wisdom says that competition yields lower prices and higher consumer surplus than monopoly....
This research considers the problem of a price-discriminating monopolist aiming at choosing output ...
This research considers the problem of a price-discriminating monopolist aiming at choosing output a...
This paper endogenizes both market transparency and product differentiation in a model of informativ...
We introduce a class of “increasing elasticity of substitution” preferences in a monopolistic compet...
We analyse a firm's investment decision in a regional economy composed of two countries. The firm al...
AbstractWe examine the impact of market size difference on the government R&D policies to provide st...
Building on the current theory of industrial concentration, we analyze the relation between market ...
In this note, we analyze the equilibrium outcomes of pricing games with product differentiation in r...
In this paper I develop a model of international duopoly, where firms invest in product differentiat...
This article analyses how product differentiation affects the volume of trade under duopoly using Sh...
The purpose of this paper is to explain the puzzling empirical observa-tion by Mayer and Ottaviano (...