The authors analyze a duopoly model where firms first choose locations on a line segment and then choose quantities in the second stage. Pure strategy quantity equilibria fail to exist for locations close together. For low transport costs, near agglomeration occurs and the firms choose locations where pure strategy quantity equilibria exist. As transport costs rise, firms become less direct competitors as they move away from the center of the market. Coauthors are James F. Klein, Eytan Sheshinski, and Steven M. Slutsky. We analyse a duopoly model where firms first choose locations on a line segment and then choose quantities in the second stage. Pure strategy quantity equilibria fail to exist for locations close together. For low transport ...
A model of duopoly competition in nonlinear pricing when firms are imperfectly informed about consum...
We provide a comparison of the location equilibria in a duopoly model under three alternative soluti...
In contrast to most of the literature on a circular market in which firms choose to disperse equally...
Models of spatial competition have proven to be very useful in describing differentiated products ma...
We analyse a two-stage location-quantity game with many firms and two regions. We show that the firm...
We develop a spatial model representing three cities of different size and connected by a road. We s...
In this paper, we consider oligopolistic competition in a spatial model when firms take care of good...
I analyse a two-stage location-price duopoly game under uniform delivered pricing when firms produce...
We develop a spatial model representing three cities of different size and connected by a road. We s...
Typescript (photocopy).In markets where firms and buyers are separated by costly distance, the degre...
Typescript (photocopy).In markets where firms and buyers are separated by costly distance, the degre...
Models of spatial firm competition assume that customers are distributed in space and tran...
This work analyses a two-stage price–location game between a profit maximising firm and a primary prod...
This paper studies a spatial duopoly under uniform delivered pricing when firms do not ration the su...
EnWe consider a quantity-location duopoly game in a spatial discrimination model in which we assume ...
A model of duopoly competition in nonlinear pricing when firms are imperfectly informed about consum...
We provide a comparison of the location equilibria in a duopoly model under three alternative soluti...
In contrast to most of the literature on a circular market in which firms choose to disperse equally...
Models of spatial competition have proven to be very useful in describing differentiated products ma...
We analyse a two-stage location-quantity game with many firms and two regions. We show that the firm...
We develop a spatial model representing three cities of different size and connected by a road. We s...
In this paper, we consider oligopolistic competition in a spatial model when firms take care of good...
I analyse a two-stage location-price duopoly game under uniform delivered pricing when firms produce...
We develop a spatial model representing three cities of different size and connected by a road. We s...
Typescript (photocopy).In markets where firms and buyers are separated by costly distance, the degre...
Typescript (photocopy).In markets where firms and buyers are separated by costly distance, the degre...
Models of spatial firm competition assume that customers are distributed in space and tran...
This work analyses a two-stage price–location game between a profit maximising firm and a primary prod...
This paper studies a spatial duopoly under uniform delivered pricing when firms do not ration the su...
EnWe consider a quantity-location duopoly game in a spatial discrimination model in which we assume ...
A model of duopoly competition in nonlinear pricing when firms are imperfectly informed about consum...
We provide a comparison of the location equilibria in a duopoly model under three alternative soluti...
In contrast to most of the literature on a circular market in which firms choose to disperse equally...