Search results for "Econometric"

showing 10 items of 3780 documents

Pure Component Pricing in a Duopoly

2002

In this paper, we focus on price competition between several multiproduct firms which produce differentiated systems, each consisting of two complementary products. It is shown here that if firms are restricted to pure component pricing (bundling is not allowed) whenever components produced are compatible, pure strategy equilibrium may not exist. With the use of bundling strategies, pure strategy equilibrium always exists. For the pure component pricing case we provide a full characterization for the existence of a pure strategy equilibrium.

Competition (economics)Economics and EconometricsStrategyComponent (UML)EconomicsDuopolyMathematical economicsComplementary goodThe Manchester School
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Evolución de la eficiencia técnica de la industria textil española en el periodo 1995-2005. Análisis mediante un modelo frontera estocástica*

2021

La industria textil española, con un peso relativo importante en la manufactura, se encuentra sumida en una profunda crisis como consecuencia de la cada vez más agresiva e intensa competencia ejercida por los países productores de bajo coste. Si bien la eficiencia no agota el conjunto de estrategias para ser competitivo, la presencia de competidores induce a su búsqueda (Porter, 1990). En este trabajo se examina la evolución de la eficiencia técnica del textil español. Con tal finalidad, para el periodo 1995-2005 y cada uno de los siete grupos de actividad en que puede subdividirse la industria textil, se estima una frontera de producción estocástica de tipo translog. Los resultados empíric…

Competition (economics)Economics and EconometricsTextile industryEngineeringEconomyLiberalizationbusiness.industryWelfare economicsCompetitor analysisProduction–possibility frontierbusinessInefficiencyStudies of Applied Economics
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Credit risk and efficiency in the European banking system: A three-stage analysis

2002

Increased competition and the attempts of European banks to increase their presence in other markets may have affected the efficiency and credit risk in the banking system. The first aspect is the incentive in reducing costs in order to gain in competitiveness. The second is associated with their lack of knowledge of such markets and/ or acceptance of a higher risk in order to increase their market share. Despite the importance of these aspects, banking literature has usually analysed the effects of competition on the efficiency of banking systems without considering these aspects. The few studies that attempt to obtain risk adjusted efficiency measures do not consider that part of the risk…

Competition (economics)Economics and EconometricsThree stageIncentiveOrder (exchange)Financial economicsEconomicsFinancial risk managementMonetary economicsMarket shareFinanceSystem aCredit riskApplied Financial Economics
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Empirical Evidence on the Relationship between Mobile Termination Rates and Firms' Profits

2015

The theoretical literature on mobile termination rates (MTRs) is inconclusive on how the level of MTRs affects overall consumer charges and firms' profits. We show that when firms offer bundles with fixed included usage – a tariff structure that has become more common in recent years – an identical change in all MTRs does not affect firms' retail prices or profits. We use a panel dataset from saturated European markets to estimate the effect of MTRs on mobile operators' profits. As predicted by the theoretical model, we cannot reject the fact that firms' profits are unaffected by an identical change in all MTRs.

Competition (economics)MicroeconomicsEconomics and Econometrics0502 economics and business05 social sciencesEconomicsTariffMonetary economics050207 economicsEmpirical evidence050205 econometrics The Scandinavian Journal of Economics
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Contests with size effects

2006

In this paper we analyze the structure of contest equilibria with a variable number of individuals. First we analyze a situation where the total prize depends on the number of agents and where every single agent faces opportunity costs of investing in the contest. Second we analyze a situation where the agents face a trade-off between productive and appropriative investments. Here, the number of agents may also influence the productivity of productive investments. It turns out that both types of contests may lead to opposing results concerning the optimal number of individuals depending on the strength of size effects. Whereas in the former case individual utility is u-shaped when the numbe…

Competition (economics)MicroeconomicsEconomics and EconometricsOpportunity costMarket competitionPolitical Science and International RelationsEconomicsSingle agentCONTESTVariable numberProductivityEuropean Journal of Political Economy
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BASIC RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT IN VERTICAL MARKETS*

2012

This paper considers the role of basic research and development (R&D) investment in vertical markets in which an incumbent owner of a basic technological input faces potential competition. We identify the conditions under which the socially optimal investment in basic research involves entry by new firms. Our main insight is that there is a role for public investment in R&D that appears to have been overlooked in the existing literature. This role draws on the idea that basic R&D adds to the credibility of the threat of the potential development of alternative technologies by reducing their implementation costs.

Competition (economics)MicroeconomicsEconomics and EconometricsPublic investmentDevelopment (topology)Basic researchCredibilityEconomicsInvestment (macroeconomics)The Manchester School
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EXPLANATORY FACTORS OF MARKET POWER IN THE BANKING SYSTEM

2007

The aim of the study is to analyse the explanatory factors of market power in the banking system. Using as laboratory the Spanish banking system in the period 1986–2002, results show an increase of market power from the mid-1990s. Of the set of variables that the model posits as explaining market power, those with the greatest explanatory power are size, efficiency and specialization; concentration is not significant. This last result shows the limitations of the approaches, studies and decision-making rules of economic policy that uses market concentration as a proxy for the degree of competition.

Competition (economics)MicroeconomicsFactor marketEconomics and EconometricsMarket analysisMarket saturationEconomicsNonmarket forcesMarket powerMarket concentrationExplanatory powerThe Manchester School
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Upward and Downward Limit Pricing: The Role of Post-Entry Competition

2005

Under asymmetric information, entry-deterring strategies by an incumbent monopolist can consist of deviations from its static monopoly price through downward deviations termed downward limit pricing, or upward deviations termed upward limit pricing. Our analysis shows that the mode of post-entry competition influences the range of situations in which an incumbent adopts a strategy of downward limit pricing instead of an upward one: this range is greater under price than under output competition; it is decreasing in the degree of product differentiation; and with homogeneous product only downward limit pricing emerges under price competition, while upward limit pricing can still take place w…

Competition (economics)MicroeconomicsInformation asymmetryMonopoly priceHomogeneousEconomicsProduct (category theory)Product differentiationGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceLimit priceThe B.E. Journal of Theoretical Economics
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2002

This paper analyses the effects of partially revocable endogenous commitments of a seller in a negotiation with a deadline. In particular, we examine when commitment is a source of strength, a source of inefficiency and when it does not affect the bargaining outcome at all. We show that when commitment possesses a minimum amount of irrevocability this crucially determines the bargaining outcome. In the bilateral bargaining case, commitment becomes a source of inefficiency since it causes a deadline effect. In the choice of partner framework, however, the deadline effect disappears and there is an immediate agreement and, moreover, commitment becomes a source of strength since it increases t…

Competition (economics)MicroeconomicsNegotiationmedia_common.quotation_subjectStochastic gameEconomicsComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDSOCIETYAffect (psychology)InefficiencyGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceOutcome (game theory)media_commonSpanish Economic Review
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A model of internal and external competition in a High Speed Rail line

2015

This paper is a contribution to evaluate structural and behavioral changes in railway passenger markets. The novel elements of our analysis are the following: (i) the consideration of inter-modal and intra-modal competition, (ii) the presence of public and private operators, and (iii) endogenous service frequency. After calibrating the model using actual data from two Spanish High Speed Rail lines, simulation exercises allow us to conclude the following. Privatization, whether entry occurs or not, would prompt an increase in prices and a reduction in the number of train services, eventually leading to welfare decreases, as compared with a regime where the incumbent rail operator remained pu…

Competition (economics)Operator (computer programming)Rail linemedia_common.quotation_subjectService (economics)Economics Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)Strategic interactionEconomicsTransportationWelfareIndustrial organizationmedia_commonEconomics of Transportation
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