1. Inicio keyboard_arrow_right
  2. Investigación keyboard_arrow_right
  3. Using List Prices to Collude or to Compete?

Biblioteca

Artículo en revista académica

Using List Prices to Collude or to Compete?

  • person Juan-Pablo Montero

    Diego Cussen

  • class The Economic Journal. Vol. 134, Issue 664, Pag. 3232- 3261.

Abstract

Collusion is deemed unlikely in wholesale markets where upstream suppliers and intermediate buyers privately negotiate discounts off list prices and sales quotas are unfeasible. However, many wholesale markets include both small and large buyers who compete in the retail market. We study the role of publicly announced list prices in this wholesale-retail setting, whether suppliers collude or compete. When suppliers collude, public announcements of list prices extend the possibility of collusion from small to large buyers (the multi-buyer contact effect). When suppliers compete, these announcements provide them with commitment to negotiate better terms with large buyers (the commitment effect).