If the price is regulated in a spatial duopoly where consumers have a finite upper bound as to the price they are willing to pay for the differentiated product, in most cases the Principle of Minimum Differentiation does not apply. Depending on the market structure firms either (i) form local monopolies, or (ii) differentiate intermediately, or (iii) agglomerate at the market centre. Minimum differentiation is never total-surplus-maximizing nor desired by firms. In most cases the regulator sets a price below that maximizing industry profits. For a substantial range of market configurations the regulated (first-best) price exceeds marginal cost. This induces firms to serve a larger part of the market
This paper studies a spatial duopoly under uniform delivered pricing when firms do not ration the su...
This paper studies a spatial duopoly under uniform delivered pricing when firms do not ration the su...
Hotelling's (1929) principle of minimum differentiation and the alternative prediction that firms wi...
In this paper, we show that the strategic choice of spatial price policy under duopoly crucially dep...
Spatial price discrimination with downward-sloping demands is extended to allow for non-linear prici...
This paper studies a spatial duopoly under uniform delivered pricing when firms do not ration the su...
We investigate a spatial duopoly in which the firms simultaneously select locations at the beginning...
In a model of spatial competition, we analyze the equilibrium outcomes in markets where the product ...
This paper studies a spatial duopoly under uniform delivered pricing when firms do not ration the su...
This paper studies a spatial duopoly under uniform delivered pricing when firms do not ration the su...
[[abstract]]This paper develops a variant of Hotelling's (1929) model involving subcontracting produ...
Hotelling's (1929) principle of minimum differentiation and the alternative prediction that firms wi...
This paper studies a spatial duopoly under uniform delivered pricing when firms do not ration the su...
This paper studies a spatial duopoly under uniform delivered pricing when firms do not ration the su...
We investigate a spatial duopoly in which the firms simultaneously select locations at the beginning...
This paper studies a spatial duopoly under uniform delivered pricing when firms do not ration the su...
This paper studies a spatial duopoly under uniform delivered pricing when firms do not ration the su...
Hotelling's (1929) principle of minimum differentiation and the alternative prediction that firms wi...
In this paper, we show that the strategic choice of spatial price policy under duopoly crucially dep...
Spatial price discrimination with downward-sloping demands is extended to allow for non-linear prici...
This paper studies a spatial duopoly under uniform delivered pricing when firms do not ration the su...
We investigate a spatial duopoly in which the firms simultaneously select locations at the beginning...
In a model of spatial competition, we analyze the equilibrium outcomes in markets where the product ...
This paper studies a spatial duopoly under uniform delivered pricing when firms do not ration the su...
This paper studies a spatial duopoly under uniform delivered pricing when firms do not ration the su...
[[abstract]]This paper develops a variant of Hotelling's (1929) model involving subcontracting produ...
Hotelling's (1929) principle of minimum differentiation and the alternative prediction that firms wi...
This paper studies a spatial duopoly under uniform delivered pricing when firms do not ration the su...
This paper studies a spatial duopoly under uniform delivered pricing when firms do not ration the su...
We investigate a spatial duopoly in which the firms simultaneously select locations at the beginning...
This paper studies a spatial duopoly under uniform delivered pricing when firms do not ration the su...
This paper studies a spatial duopoly under uniform delivered pricing when firms do not ration the su...
Hotelling's (1929) principle of minimum differentiation and the alternative prediction that firms wi...