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Horizontal mergers and successive oligopoly (ABSTRACT)
Ziss, S.
published: 2005 | Research publication | Refereed Journals - Economics
Ziss, S. (2005), "Horizontal mergers and successive oligopoly". Journal of Industry, Competition and Trade, 5 (2), 99-114.
ABSTRACT: This paper considers a successive
oligopoly setting in which a set of upstream firms sell output non-exclusively
to a group of downstream firms using a linear tariff. If the concavity of retail
demand is constant then the profitability of horizontal merger at either the
upstream or the downstream stage is shown to depend on the number of firms in
the stage experiencing the merger and not on the number of firms in the other
stage. Furthermore, the profitability of merger at either stage is the same as
the profitability of merger amongst a set of vertically integrated firms in a
setting in which all firms are vertically integrated. Finally, mergers at either
stage are shown to reduce the sum of producer and consumer surplus. Moreover the
negative effects of merger on surplus are unambiguously increased by increases
in concentration in the merging stage and ambiguously affected by increases in
concentration in the non-merging stage.
Keywords horizontal mergers - double-marginalization - successive oligopoly
Download the article at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10842-005-3719-8
revised Nov 18/05
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