This article revisits the managerial delegation literature led by Vickers (1985), Fershtman and Judd (1987) and Sklivas (1987) by introducing a bargaining mechanism between owners and managers over managerial contracts. It shows that the degree of bargaining interacts with the extent of product differentiation in determining whether the sub-game perfect Nash equilibrium is sales delegation or profit maximisation. In contrast with the classical result, no sales delegation emerges and the typical prisoner’s dilemma of the managerial delegation literature is solved. This holds in both contexts of Cournot and Bertrand rivalries. The article also provides results for the more general cases with heterogeneous managerial bargaining power a...
This paper challenges the results of the “classical” managerial delegation literature, where it is a...
This paper challenges the results of the “classical” managerial delegation literature, where it is a...
This article challenges the results of the \u2018classical\u2019 managerial delegation literature, w...
This article revisits the managerial delegation literature led by Vickers (1985), Fershtman and Jud...
This article revisits the managerial delegation literature led by Vickers (1985), Fershtman and Jud...
This article revisits the managerial delegation literature led by Vickers (1985), Fershtman and Jud...
This article revisits the managerial delegation literature led by Vickers (1985), Fershtman and Judd...
This paper challenges the results of the “classical” managerial delegation literature, where it is a...
The theory of strategic managerial delegation has recently been extended by incorporating bargainin...
In a two-stage delegation game model with Nash bargaining between a manager and an owner, an equival...
The theory of strategic managerial delegation has recently been extended by incorporating bargainin...
This paper analyzes a multiple-stage game in which, at the final stage, two (managerial) firms compe...
This paper analyzes a multiple-stage game in which, at the final stage, two (managerial) firms compe...
This paper analyzes a multiple-stage game in which, at the final stage, two (managerial) firms compe...
This paper studies how alternative managerial delegation contracts in a duopoly product market inter...
This paper challenges the results of the “classical” managerial delegation literature, where it is a...
This paper challenges the results of the “classical” managerial delegation literature, where it is a...
This article challenges the results of the \u2018classical\u2019 managerial delegation literature, w...
This article revisits the managerial delegation literature led by Vickers (1985), Fershtman and Jud...
This article revisits the managerial delegation literature led by Vickers (1985), Fershtman and Jud...
This article revisits the managerial delegation literature led by Vickers (1985), Fershtman and Jud...
This article revisits the managerial delegation literature led by Vickers (1985), Fershtman and Judd...
This paper challenges the results of the “classical” managerial delegation literature, where it is a...
The theory of strategic managerial delegation has recently been extended by incorporating bargainin...
In a two-stage delegation game model with Nash bargaining between a manager and an owner, an equival...
The theory of strategic managerial delegation has recently been extended by incorporating bargainin...
This paper analyzes a multiple-stage game in which, at the final stage, two (managerial) firms compe...
This paper analyzes a multiple-stage game in which, at the final stage, two (managerial) firms compe...
This paper analyzes a multiple-stage game in which, at the final stage, two (managerial) firms compe...
This paper studies how alternative managerial delegation contracts in a duopoly product market inter...
This paper challenges the results of the “classical” managerial delegation literature, where it is a...
This paper challenges the results of the “classical” managerial delegation literature, where it is a...
This article challenges the results of the \u2018classical\u2019 managerial delegation literature, w...