Advertising Collusion in Retail Markets
We analyze non-price advertising by retail firms, when the firms are privately informed about their respective costs of production. In a static advertising game, an advertising equilibrium exists in which lower-cost firms select higher advertising levels. In this equilibrium, informed consumers rati...
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sg-smu-ink.soe_research-23032019-04-20T14:22:04Z Advertising Collusion in Retail Markets BAGWELL, Kyle LEE, Gea M. We analyze non-price advertising by retail firms, when the firms are privately informed about their respective costs of production. In a static advertising game, an advertising equilibrium exists in which lower-cost firms select higher advertising levels. In this equilibrium, informed consumers rationally employ an advertising search rule in which they buy from the highest- advertising firm, since lower-cost firms also select lower prices. In a repeated advertising game, colluding firms face a tradeoff: the use of advertising can promote productive efficiency but only if sufficient current or future advertising expenses are incurred. At one extreme, if firms pool at zero advertising, they sacrifice productive efficiency but also eliminate current and future advertising expenses. Focusing on symmetric perfect public equilibria for the repeated advertising game, we establish conditions under which optimal collusion entails pooling at zero advertising. More generally, full or partial pooling is observed in optimal collusion. Such collusive agreements reduce consumer welfare, since they restrict informed consumers ability to locate the lowest available price in the market. 2010-04-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soe_research/1304 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soe_research/article/2303/viewcontent/Bagwell.Lee.AdCollusion.Dec21.09.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection School Of Economics eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Price-competition coordination information rigidity Advertising and Promotion Management Industrial Organization |
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Price-competition coordination information rigidity Advertising and Promotion Management Industrial Organization BAGWELL, Kyle LEE, Gea M. Advertising Collusion in Retail Markets |
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We analyze non-price advertising by retail firms, when the firms are privately informed about their respective costs of production. In a static advertising game, an advertising equilibrium exists in which lower-cost firms select higher advertising levels. In this equilibrium, informed consumers rationally employ an advertising search rule in which they buy from the highest- advertising firm, since lower-cost firms also select lower prices. In a repeated advertising game, colluding firms face a tradeoff: the use of advertising can promote productive efficiency but only if sufficient current or future advertising expenses are incurred. At one extreme, if firms pool at zero advertising, they sacrifice productive efficiency but also eliminate current and future advertising expenses. Focusing on symmetric perfect public equilibria for the repeated advertising game, we establish conditions under which optimal collusion entails pooling at zero advertising. More generally, full or partial pooling is observed in optimal collusion. Such collusive agreements reduce consumer welfare, since they restrict informed consumers ability to locate the lowest available price in the market. |
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text |
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BAGWELL, Kyle LEE, Gea M. |
author_facet |
BAGWELL, Kyle LEE, Gea M. |
author_sort |
BAGWELL, Kyle |
title |
Advertising Collusion in Retail Markets |
title_short |
Advertising Collusion in Retail Markets |
title_full |
Advertising Collusion in Retail Markets |
title_fullStr |
Advertising Collusion in Retail Markets |
title_full_unstemmed |
Advertising Collusion in Retail Markets |
title_sort |
advertising collusion in retail markets |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2010 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soe_research/1304 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soe_research/article/2303/viewcontent/Bagwell.Lee.AdCollusion.Dec21.09.pdf |
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1770571072096174080 |