We evaluate the impact of technological externalities on the location choices of duopolistic firms in a Weber triangle. Assuming technological spillover effects to be decreasing in the distance between firms, we show that each firm’s optimum location is independent of a demand shock when the firm’s distance to market is constant. When distance to market is variable, a firm’s optimum location will not be independent of a demand shock if one of the duopolistic firms has non-linear technology. The optimum location of an IRS (DRS) firm moves away from (closer to) the market place if the other firm is CRS and if demand is not strongly concave or convex. Copyright Springer-Verlag Berlin/Heidelberg 2004Duopoly, externalities, technological spillov...
[[abstract]]This paper examines the impact of demand on the location decision of a monopsonistic fir...
We present a model of spatial price discrimination where R&D spillovers are endogenous as they depen...
In a spatial economy where oligopolist firms compete in R&D, it is found that geography affects the ...
[[abstract]]We evaluate the impact of technological externalities on the location choices of duopoli...
[[abstract]]We discuss the strategic location interactions between two heterogeneous firms with diff...
This paper investigates firms' optimal location choices explicitly accounting for the role of inward...
We consider a three-location duopoly model such that (i) firms choose production and innovation loca...
We introduce spatial spillovers as an externality in the production function of competitive firms op...
We present a three-stage game where two firms choose location, R&D and price, under the assumption t...
We present a three-stage game where two firms choose location, R&D and price, under the assumption t...
[[abstract]]This paper departs from earlier work on location theory by introducing external economie...
Empirical evidence suggests that technological spillovers also depend on the mode chosen by firms to...
Jacobs (1969) argues that uncompensated knowledge spillovers have played a crucial role in populatio...
In a duopoly model, marginal cost decreases if product differentiation does so, provided that firms ...
This paper proposes a theoretical model of spatial duopoly, where the location, on the one hand, and...
[[abstract]]This paper examines the impact of demand on the location decision of a monopsonistic fir...
We present a model of spatial price discrimination where R&D spillovers are endogenous as they depen...
In a spatial economy where oligopolist firms compete in R&D, it is found that geography affects the ...
[[abstract]]We evaluate the impact of technological externalities on the location choices of duopoli...
[[abstract]]We discuss the strategic location interactions between two heterogeneous firms with diff...
This paper investigates firms' optimal location choices explicitly accounting for the role of inward...
We consider a three-location duopoly model such that (i) firms choose production and innovation loca...
We introduce spatial spillovers as an externality in the production function of competitive firms op...
We present a three-stage game where two firms choose location, R&D and price, under the assumption t...
We present a three-stage game where two firms choose location, R&D and price, under the assumption t...
[[abstract]]This paper departs from earlier work on location theory by introducing external economie...
Empirical evidence suggests that technological spillovers also depend on the mode chosen by firms to...
Jacobs (1969) argues that uncompensated knowledge spillovers have played a crucial role in populatio...
In a duopoly model, marginal cost decreases if product differentiation does so, provided that firms ...
This paper proposes a theoretical model of spatial duopoly, where the location, on the one hand, and...
[[abstract]]This paper examines the impact of demand on the location decision of a monopsonistic fir...
We present a model of spatial price discrimination where R&D spillovers are endogenous as they depen...
In a spatial economy where oligopolist firms compete in R&D, it is found that geography affects the ...