In this paper we study the nature of predatory behavior in an oligopolistic framework. We use the long-purse story of financial vulnerability to demonstrate that predatory behavior is less likely to occur in an oligopoly than in a monopoly. We show the nature of the free-rider problem, and illustrate the range of multiple equilibria that may exist in this situation. We also show how small firms may be less likely targets for predatory attacks than their larger, more efficient rivals, examine the model with uncertainty added, and discuss the model’s application to antitrust
The price naturally reflects not just the amount of work vested into the goods but it is affected al...
We propose a simple theory of predatory pricing, based on incumbency advantages, scale economies and...
Can a price ever be too low? Can competition ever be ruinous? Questions like these have always accom...
In this paper we study the nature of predatory behavior in an oligopolistic framework. We use the lo...
Predatory pricing—a deliberate strategy of pricing aggressively in order to eliminate competitors—is...
Predatory pricing—a deliberate strategy of pricing aggressively in order to eliminate competitors—is...
We formally characterize predatory pricing in a modern industry-dynamics framework that endogenizes ...
Isaac and Smith's (1985) single market design did not produce predatory pricing. Such pricing was ob...
Over the last decade the market-driven economic philosophies of successive New Zealand governments ...
In this paper, a simple game-theoretic entry deterrence model is developed that integrates both limi...
We use a variant of the Hotelling (1929) model to illustrate that, when a firm faces hard payment co...
We study the anticompetitive effects of predatory pricing and the efficacy of three policy responses...
The paper analyzes the last three decades of debates on predatory pricing in US antitrust law, start...
We explore the logic of predation and rules designed to prevent it in markets subject to network eff...
Recent literature on the law and economics of antitrust has devoted increasing attention to the issu...
The price naturally reflects not just the amount of work vested into the goods but it is affected al...
We propose a simple theory of predatory pricing, based on incumbency advantages, scale economies and...
Can a price ever be too low? Can competition ever be ruinous? Questions like these have always accom...
In this paper we study the nature of predatory behavior in an oligopolistic framework. We use the lo...
Predatory pricing—a deliberate strategy of pricing aggressively in order to eliminate competitors—is...
Predatory pricing—a deliberate strategy of pricing aggressively in order to eliminate competitors—is...
We formally characterize predatory pricing in a modern industry-dynamics framework that endogenizes ...
Isaac and Smith's (1985) single market design did not produce predatory pricing. Such pricing was ob...
Over the last decade the market-driven economic philosophies of successive New Zealand governments ...
In this paper, a simple game-theoretic entry deterrence model is developed that integrates both limi...
We use a variant of the Hotelling (1929) model to illustrate that, when a firm faces hard payment co...
We study the anticompetitive effects of predatory pricing and the efficacy of three policy responses...
The paper analyzes the last three decades of debates on predatory pricing in US antitrust law, start...
We explore the logic of predation and rules designed to prevent it in markets subject to network eff...
Recent literature on the law and economics of antitrust has devoted increasing attention to the issu...
The price naturally reflects not just the amount of work vested into the goods but it is affected al...
We propose a simple theory of predatory pricing, based on incumbency advantages, scale economies and...
Can a price ever be too low? Can competition ever be ruinous? Questions like these have always accom...