Price Signaling and Tacit Collusion Under Multimarket Contact

2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Niklas Horstmann ◽  
Jan Kraemer





2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gaurab Aryal ◽  
Dennis J. Campbell ◽  
Federico Ciliberto ◽  
Ekaterina A. Khmelnitskaya




Author(s):  
Paula Cruz-García ◽  
Juan Fernández de Guevara ◽  
Joaquín Maudos




2021 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Guillem Roig

Abstract When consumers have preference costs, two opposing effects need to be assessed to analyse the incentives of firms to set collusive prices. On the one hand, preference costs make a deviation from collusion less attractive, as the deviating firm must offer a large enough discount to cover the preference costs. On the other hand, preference costs lock in consumers and make punishment from rivals less effective. When preference costs are low, the latter of the two effects dominates and collusion is more challenging to sustain than in a situation with no preference costs. With high enough preference costs, collusion is a (weakly) dominant strategy. These results do not eventuate in a model with switching costs.



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