Input Price Discrimination with Downstream Cournot Competitors
22 Pages Posted: 1 Nov 2002
Date Written: October 2002
Abstract
This Paper addresses the question of third-degree price discrimination in input markets. I propose a solution that relies on a method that decomposes the upstream monopolist's profit into two parts, one that depends on average input prices, and one that depends on their distribution. I am able to obtain rather general results, and, in the linear demand case, I obtain a full characterization of the equilibria in the two regimes of price discrimination and price uniformity, generalizing the findings of Yoshida (2000). Under reasonable assumptions, input price discrimination negatively affects both consumer surplus and total welfare.
Keywords: input price discrimination
JEL Classification: L42
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Regulating for Non-Price Discrimination: The Case of UK Fixed Telecoms
By Martin E. Cave, Lisa Correa, ...
-
Regulating for Non-Price Discrimination the Case of UK Fixed Telecoms
By Martin E. Cave, Lisa Correa, ...
-
Do We Need Policy 3.0 for Telecom 3.0? The Case of the Netherlands
-
Regulatory Approaches to NGNs: An International Comparison
By J. Scott Marcus and Dieter Elixmann
-
Regulation of NGN: Structural Separation, Access Regulation, or No Regulation at All?
-
Fiber to the Home Unbundling and Retail Competition: Developments in the Netherlands