Costly collusion in differentiated industries

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This paper demonstrates that increased product differentiation will make it more difficult to sustain collusion when it is costly to coordinate or maintain collusion. This result holds for a wide range of models, including all those commonly used to model competition between differentiated products. This contrasts with the previous theoretical literature, which shows that, in the absence of these costs, greater differentiation can help foster collusion under some common models of product differentiation but is consistent with the empirical literature, which suggests that collusion tends to occur most among homogeneous firms.
Publisher
INFORMS
Issue Date
2007-09
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Keywords

DELEGATING PRICING DECISIONS; PRODUCT DIFFERENTIATION; MARKET POWER; SUPERGAMES; INFORMATION

Citation

MARKETING SCIENCE, v.26, no.5, pp.660 - 665

ISSN
0732-2399
DOI
10.1287/mksc.1060.0255
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/255656
Appears in Collection
MT-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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