Consider a monopolist who sells a durable good, and repairs the good if it breaks down. Suppose that contracts that specify future repair prices cannot be written, so that there is an aftermarket" situation. When consumers are risk-averse, the monopolist chooses inefficiently high repair prices; if complete warranties were possible, he would fully insure consumers by guaranteeing to repair the good at a zero fee. To increase efficiency, the monopolist may attract a rival firm in the aftermarket, or lease the good. The latter option restores first-best efficienc
This paper reconsiders the proposition put forward by many economists that monopolies would produce ...
In this paper, I show that the standard Bertrand competition argument does not apply when firms comp...
This paper studies competition among equipment sellers who each monopolize their equipment’s afterma...
In the presence of moral hazard, the optimal contract for a durable-goods monopolist is a lease with...
In the presence of moral hazard, the optimal contract for a durable-goods monopolist is a lease with...
In the presence of moral hazard, the optimal contract for a durable-goods monopolist is a lease with...
In many recent antitrust cases, manufacturers of complex high-technology equipment have been accused...
Abstract This paper investigates firms' abilities to tacitly collude when these firms each mono...
This article considers the problem of monopoly provision of product warranties when consumers are he...
This paper investigates \u85rmsabilities to tacitly collude when they each monopolize a proprietary ...
This article considers the problem of monopoly provision of product warranties when consumers are he...
Significant attention has been paid to why a durable-goods producer with little or no market power w...
In the presence of moral hazard, the optimal contract for a durable-goods monopolist is a lease with...
In the presence of moral hazard, the optimal contract for a durable-goods monopolist is a lease with...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73365/1/j.1365-2745.1998.00285.x.pd
This paper reconsiders the proposition put forward by many economists that monopolies would produce ...
In this paper, I show that the standard Bertrand competition argument does not apply when firms comp...
This paper studies competition among equipment sellers who each monopolize their equipment’s afterma...
In the presence of moral hazard, the optimal contract for a durable-goods monopolist is a lease with...
In the presence of moral hazard, the optimal contract for a durable-goods monopolist is a lease with...
In the presence of moral hazard, the optimal contract for a durable-goods monopolist is a lease with...
In many recent antitrust cases, manufacturers of complex high-technology equipment have been accused...
Abstract This paper investigates firms' abilities to tacitly collude when these firms each mono...
This article considers the problem of monopoly provision of product warranties when consumers are he...
This paper investigates \u85rmsabilities to tacitly collude when they each monopolize a proprietary ...
This article considers the problem of monopoly provision of product warranties when consumers are he...
Significant attention has been paid to why a durable-goods producer with little or no market power w...
In the presence of moral hazard, the optimal contract for a durable-goods monopolist is a lease with...
In the presence of moral hazard, the optimal contract for a durable-goods monopolist is a lease with...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73365/1/j.1365-2745.1998.00285.x.pd
This paper reconsiders the proposition put forward by many economists that monopolies would produce ...
In this paper, I show that the standard Bertrand competition argument does not apply when firms comp...
This paper studies competition among equipment sellers who each monopolize their equipment’s afterma...