Price discrimination by imperfectly competitive firms may intensify competition, leading to lower prices for all consumers; the tradeoff of consumer groups' welfare that is characteristic of monopolistic discrimination need not arise. This escalation of competition may make firms worse off, and as a result firms may wish to avoid the discriminatory outcome. Under conditions similar to those in which unambiguous price and welfare effects may arise, unilateral commitments not to price discriminate - including the adoption of everyday low pricing or no-haggle policies - may raise firm profits by softening price competition.
This paper presents simple conditions for monopoly third-degree price discrimination to have negativ...
This article analyses the pricing policy equilibria emerging in a duopoly when one firm may choose w...
This thesis aims at a theoretical study of price discrimination in imperfectly competitive markets ...
In an oligopoly model with switching costs firms have no incentive to discriminate by price (third d...
Abstract In this article we examine the effects of third degree price discrimination in asymmetric C...
The author examines third-degree price discrimination by an upstream monopolist in an intermediate g...
Sufficient conditions are developed for third-degree price discrimination by a monopolist serving al...
We study competition by firms that simultaneously post (potentially nonlinear) tariffs to consumers ...
We study competition by firms that simultaneously post (potentially nonlinear) tariffs to consumers ...
In this paper a discrete choice model is suggested which generates unambiguously lower prices, if ol...
This paper attempts to provide a discussion on the ways in which price discrimination affects econom...
Politicians, regulators and antitrust analysts have often used the presence of price discrimination ...
Abstract. We consider the general problem of price discrimination with nonlinear pricing in an oligo...
We analyze the welfare impact of monopolistic third degree price discrimination when all markets are...
One main result about the welfare effects of third-degree price discrimination by a monopolist is th...
This paper presents simple conditions for monopoly third-degree price discrimination to have negativ...
This article analyses the pricing policy equilibria emerging in a duopoly when one firm may choose w...
This thesis aims at a theoretical study of price discrimination in imperfectly competitive markets ...
In an oligopoly model with switching costs firms have no incentive to discriminate by price (third d...
Abstract In this article we examine the effects of third degree price discrimination in asymmetric C...
The author examines third-degree price discrimination by an upstream monopolist in an intermediate g...
Sufficient conditions are developed for third-degree price discrimination by a monopolist serving al...
We study competition by firms that simultaneously post (potentially nonlinear) tariffs to consumers ...
We study competition by firms that simultaneously post (potentially nonlinear) tariffs to consumers ...
In this paper a discrete choice model is suggested which generates unambiguously lower prices, if ol...
This paper attempts to provide a discussion on the ways in which price discrimination affects econom...
Politicians, regulators and antitrust analysts have often used the presence of price discrimination ...
Abstract. We consider the general problem of price discrimination with nonlinear pricing in an oligo...
We analyze the welfare impact of monopolistic third degree price discrimination when all markets are...
One main result about the welfare effects of third-degree price discrimination by a monopolist is th...
This paper presents simple conditions for monopoly third-degree price discrimination to have negativ...
This article analyses the pricing policy equilibria emerging in a duopoly when one firm may choose w...
This thesis aims at a theoretical study of price discrimination in imperfectly competitive markets ...