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A central question in economics is understanding the difficulties that parties have in reaching mutually beneficial agreements. Informational differences provide an appealing explanation for bargaining inefficiencies. This chapter provides an overview of the theoretical and empirical literature...
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A central question in economics is understanding the difficulties that parties have in reaching mutually beneficial agreements. Informational differences provide an appealing explanation for bargaining inefficiencies. This chapter provides an overview of the theoretical and empirical literature...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10014024495
In a vertically differentiated durable goods duopoly, prices tend to decline over time because the high-quality manufacturer's future product may compete more directly with the other firm's present product than with its own. This removes the standard reason not to cut prices (Stokey, 1979)....
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In recent years economists have begun to use the techniques of non-linear dynamics to show that some apparently erratic and turbulent economic phenomena reflect subtle underlying patterns. How do cyclic and chaotic dynamics arise in economic models of equilibrium? How can empirical methods be...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10014477901
This chapter utilizes the results of Deneckere ·& Kovenock (1988, 1989, 1992, 1996) on price setting games with capacity constraints and different unit costs up to capacity to analyze the effects of quotas and tariffs in a model in which a domestic market for a homogeneous product is supplied...
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