Search results for "competition."

showing 10 items of 1367 documents

Cooperation among competitors: A comparison of cost-sharing mechanisms

2016

Abstract In this paper, we investigate the consequences of using outcome-based versus ex ante-based cost-sharing mechanisms in terms of competing firms' profitability and total welfare. We consider two firms making a joint expenditure, which can positively affect firms' demand and/or unit operating costs, while competing in the final market by setting either price or quantity. We compare two outcome-based cost-sharing mechanisms, i.e., Quantity Proportional (QP) and Total Margin proportional (TM), with the more competitive Fixed Share (FS) mechanism where cost-sharing is set up on an ex ante basis. We show that outcome-based mechanisms, and even a fully collusive behavior induced by the opt…

Economics and Econometrics0211 other engineering and technologiesCost-sharing mechanism02 engineering and technologyManagement Science and Operations ResearchOutcome (game theory)Industrial and Manufacturing EngineeringCompetition (economics)Microeconomics0502 economics and businessEconomicsGame theory.Industrial organization021103 operations researchCompetitionEx-ante05 social sciencesCompetitor analysisEconomic surplusSettore ING-IND/35 - Ingegneria Economico-GestionaleCooperation; Competition; Cost-sharing mechanisms; Decision making; Game theory.General Business Management and AccountingCooperationCost sharingProfitability indexDecision makingGame theory050203 business & managementInternational Journal of Production Economics
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Attuned HRM Systems for Social Enterprises

2021

This paper is motivated by a puzzling observation made when conducting a case study of ProCredit (PC), a well-known social bank. The HR practices that this social enterprise (SE) adopted to cultivate mission identification were unfavorably impacting its retention rate. Building on prior research and our analysis of the case, we argue the need for SEs to embrace HRM systems that are both mission-identification proactive and employee-retention preemptive. It theorizes that these HRM systems should be attuned to the labor market conditions (e.g., market segmentation and competition for employees) that frame how SEs develop and sustain Person-Organization (P-O) fit. Attuned HRM systems are adap…

Economics and Econometrics05 social sciencesFrame (networking)Bancs hipotecaris06 humanities and the artsRetention rate0603 philosophy ethics and religionGeneral Business Management and AccountingEconomia socialCompetition (economics)Identification (information)Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Market segmentation0502 economics and business060301 applied ethicsBusinessBusiness and International ManagementBusiness ethicsLaw050203 business & managementIndustrial organizationMarket conditionsSocial enterprise
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Local bank competition and small business lending after the onset of the financial crisis

2016

This paper examines whether the effects of the financial crisis on the volumes and prices of small business loans depended on the pre-crisis local competitive environment. To address this question, I employ a unique data set on Finnish cooperative banks. I find that the monthly volumes of new business loans decreased and the average loan margins increased after the onset of the crisis. The decrease in volumes and the increase in margins were greater in local banking markets that were more competitive before the crisis. The results for the loan margins are more robust than those obtained for the volumes. Auxiliary analyses suggest that the greater effects in the more competitive markets are …

Economics and Econometrics050208 financebusiness.industryfinancial crisis05 social sciencesFinancial systemInternational economicslocal bank competitionSmall businessCompetition (economics)Loan0502 economics and businessFinancial crisisEconomics050207 economicsbusinessta512Financesmall business lending
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Damned If You Do and Damned If You Don’t: Two Masters

2018

Available online: 05 June 2018 We study common agency problems in which two principals (groups) make costly commitments to incentives that are conditioned on imperfect signals of the agent's action. Our framework allows for incentives to be either rewards or punishments. For our basic model we obtain a unique equilibrium, which typically involves randomization by both principals. Greater similarity between principals leads to more aggressive competition. The principals weakly prefer punishment to rewards, sometimes strictly. With rewards an agent voluntarily joins both groups with punishment it depends on whether severe punishments are feasible and cheap for the principals. We study whether…

Economics and EconometricsCoalition formationPunishmentmedia_common.quotation_subjectCompromiseAgency (philosophy)Sale02 engineering and technologyMicroeconomicsCompetition (economics)0502 economics and business0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringEconomicsCommon value auctionCommon agencySettore SECS-P/01 - Economia Politica050205 econometrics media_commonProtectionCommon Agency Coalition Formation Group05 social sciencesTheoryofComputation_GENERAL020207 software engineeringIncentivePolicyAction (philosophy)ImperfectGroup
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Adam Smith on Monopoly Theory. Making good a lacuna

2014

This article analyses Adam Smith's views on monopoly by focusing on Book IV and V of The Wealth of Nations. It argues that the majority of scholars have assessed Smith's analysis of monopoly starting from premises different from those, actually though implicitly, used by Smith. We show that Smith makes use of the word 'monopoly' to refer to a heterogeneous collection of market outcomes, besides that of a single seller market, and that Smith's account of monopolists' behaviour is richer than that provided by later theorists. We also show that Smith was aware of the growth-retarding effect of monopoly and urged State regulation. © 2014 Scottish Economic Society.

Economics and EconometricsCompetition; Monopoly; Classical Economics; Adam SmithSociology and Political Sciencejel:B31Adam Smith Monopoly RegulationSubject (philosophy)jel:D42jel:B12Neoclassical economicsAdam smithjel:L51jel:L41Competition (economics)medicine.anatomical_structureEconomicsmedicineClassical economicsSettore SECS-P/01 - Economia PoliticaMonopolyLacunaScottish Journal of Political Economy
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Learning competitive pricing strategies by multi-agent reinforcement learning

2003

Abstract In electronic marketplaces automated and dynamic pricing is becoming increasingly popular. Agents that perform this task can improve themselves by learning from past observations, possibly using reinforcement learning techniques. Co-learning of several adaptive agents against each other may lead to unforeseen results and increasingly dynamic behavior of the market. In this article we shed some light on price developments arising from a simple price adaptation strategy. Furthermore, we examine several adaptive pricing strategies and their learning behavior in a co-learning scenario with different levels of competition. Q-learning manages to learn best-reply strategies well, but is e…

Economics and EconometricsControl and OptimizationManagement scienceApplied MathematicsQ-learningAgent-based computational economicsTask (project management)Competition (economics)Pricing strategiesRisk analysis (engineering)Dynamic pricingEconomicsReinforcement learningAdaptation (computer science)Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control
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How endogenous asymmetries in interregional market access trigger regional divergence

2005

We investigate how asymmetric trade patterns in differentiated products affect the regional distribution of economic activities. The asymmetry in interregional market access is an endogenous result of price competition and industry location and arises for intermediate values of trade costs. We show that the emergence of one-way trade in differentiated products gives rise to strong agglomeration forces and leads to the absorption of the smaller region's industry by the larger region. The number of spatial equilibria increases once the pattern of trade is endogenously accounted for. (c) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Economics and EconometricsDivergence (linguistics)Economies of agglomerationbusiness.industryMarket accessDistribution (economics)Product differentiationInternational economicsTrade costUrban StudiesCompetition (economics)MicroeconomicsEconomicsbusinessRegional Science and Urban Economics
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Depression of the deprived or eroding enthusiasm of the elites: What has shifted the support for international trade?

2020

Abstract We use the 2003 and 2013 waves of the International Survey Program (ISSP) in order to explore the change in people’s attitudes that may be behind the recent backlash against globalization. We show that the average support for international trade has decreased in many – albeit not all – countries, and we demonstrate that these changes are related to the depth and length of the global financial crisis of 2008/09 as well as the evolution of income inequality. Moreover, our results document a declining support of those individuals who are likely to benefit from international trade: the young, high-skilled and well-off. We show that this “eroding enthusiasm of the elites” is empirically…

Economics and EconometricsEnthusiasmbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectInternational surveyInternational tradeCompetition (economics)GlobalizationEconomic inequalityDepression (economics)Order (exchange)Political sciencePolitical Science and International RelationsFinancial crisisbusinessmedia_commonEuropean Journal of Political Economy
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Founding family leadership and industry profitability

2008

Published version of an article from the journal: Small Business Economics In this article, we argue that firms in high-margin industries can benefit from founding family influence. Specifically, in more profitable markets, the influence of the founding family provides an additional corporate governance-monitoring function. The sample consists of 294 firm-year observations from 98 publicly traded companies headquartered in Sweden, representing approximately half of all non-financial traded firms. Our support that the effect of family leadership in publicly held firms should be assessed in relation to the intensity of industry competition

Economics and EconometricsEntrepreneurshipCorporate governancemedia_common.quotation_subjectSample (statistics)General Business Management and AccountingCompetition (economics)Market economyEconomicsProfitability indexMarketingFunction (engineering)VDP::Social science: 200::Economics: 210::Business: 213media_common
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Modes of innovation and differentiated responses to globalisation - a case study of innovation modes in the Agder region, Norway

2011

Published version of an article in the jounal: Journal of the Knowledge Economy. Also available from the publisher at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13132-011-0060-9 The main argument of this paper is that firms and industries are dominated by different innovation modes and that they therefore respond differently to challenges of globalisation. The paper differentiates between three modes: science, technology and innovation (STI), doing, using and interacting (DUI) application mode and the DUI technological mode. These innovation modes are based on different dominant knowledge bases, modes of learning and external knowledge. What is the implication of these differences with regard to competing…

Economics and EconometricsEntrepreneurshipMode (statistics)globalisationVDP::Social science: 200Regional policyinnovation modesCompetition (economics)regional innovation systemsGlobalizationEmpirical researchArgumentknowledge sourcesEconomicsPosition (finance)MarketingIndustrial organizationregional policy
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