Publication | Open Access
The Competitive Effects of Entry: Evidence from Supercenter Expansion
86
Citations
42
References
2020
Year
Business AnalyticsCompetitive AdvantageIncumbent PricesBarrier To EntrySupercenter EntryMarket AnalysisManagementEconomic AnalysisExact LocationLocal MarketInternational BusinessEconomicsPrice FormationMarket BehaviorCompetitive EffectsMarketingBusinessBusiness StrategyDynamic CompetitionMarket PowerMicroeconomics
Coupling weekly grocery transactions with the exact location and opening date of Walmarts over an 11-year period, we examine how Supercenter entry affects prices and revenues at incumbent supermarkets. We find that entry within 1 mile of an incumbent causes a sharp 16 percent drop in revenue, a competitive effect that decays quickly with distance. Surprisingly, despite large cross-sectional differences in supermarket prices by exposure to Walmart, our findings also indicate that Supercenter entry has no causal effect on incumbent prices. This result is robust across many dimensions, including a lack of price response for individual products, and across brands within a category. (JEL D22, L81, R32)
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