Using a spatial competition framework with three ex ante identical firms, we study the effects of a horizontal merger on quality, price and welfare. The merging firms always reduce quality. They also increase prices if demand responsiveness to quality is sufficiently low. The non-merging firm, on the other hand, always responds by increasing both quality and prices. Overall, a merger leads to higher average prices and quality in the market. The welfare implications of a merger are not clear-cut. If the demand responsiveness to quality is sufficiently high, some consumers benefit from the merger and social welfare might also increase
This paper investigates the competitive effects of mergers involving producers of complementary good...
This paper examines the output and profit effects of horizontal mergers between up-stream firms in i...
This paper surveys the literature on the price effects of horizontal mergers. Most mergers examined ...
Using a spatial competition framework with three ex ante identical firms, we study the effects of a ...
We study the e¤ects of a horizontal merger when \u85rms compete along two di¤erent dimensions: quali...
We consider the impact of merger on the equilibrium price and quality of products. Consumer demand f...
We investigate mergers in markets where quality differences between products are central and firms m...
In imperfectly competitive markets firms with high costs produce positive output. The market's abili...
Retrospective studies of horizontal mergers have focused on their price effects, leaving the importa...
We study horizontal mergers in a network products market with a three-firm model of spatial competit...
Cost synergies are an explicitly recognized justification for a two-firm merger, and empirical techn...
We consider mergers between multi-product firms in a market with monopolistically competitive fringe...
We use a non-spatial (Chamberlinian) product differentiation model to analyze the welfare effects of...
Motivated by a number of high-profile antitrust cases, we study mergers when firms offer differentia...
Using a spatial competition framework with three ex ante identical hospitals, we study the effects o...
This paper investigates the competitive effects of mergers involving producers of complementary good...
This paper examines the output and profit effects of horizontal mergers between up-stream firms in i...
This paper surveys the literature on the price effects of horizontal mergers. Most mergers examined ...
Using a spatial competition framework with three ex ante identical firms, we study the effects of a ...
We study the e¤ects of a horizontal merger when \u85rms compete along two di¤erent dimensions: quali...
We consider the impact of merger on the equilibrium price and quality of products. Consumer demand f...
We investigate mergers in markets where quality differences between products are central and firms m...
In imperfectly competitive markets firms with high costs produce positive output. The market's abili...
Retrospective studies of horizontal mergers have focused on their price effects, leaving the importa...
We study horizontal mergers in a network products market with a three-firm model of spatial competit...
Cost synergies are an explicitly recognized justification for a two-firm merger, and empirical techn...
We consider mergers between multi-product firms in a market with monopolistically competitive fringe...
We use a non-spatial (Chamberlinian) product differentiation model to analyze the welfare effects of...
Motivated by a number of high-profile antitrust cases, we study mergers when firms offer differentia...
Using a spatial competition framework with three ex ante identical hospitals, we study the effects o...
This paper investigates the competitive effects of mergers involving producers of complementary good...
This paper examines the output and profit effects of horizontal mergers between up-stream firms in i...
This paper surveys the literature on the price effects of horizontal mergers. Most mergers examined ...