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An empirical investigation of the welfare effects of banning wholesale price discrimination
72
Citations
45
References
2009
Year
Pricing PolicySearch CostsManagementAntitrust EnforcementPrice RegulationCompetition IssueConsumer ChoiceEconomicsPrice FormationPrice ElasticityDisparate ImpactWholesale Price DiscriminationWelfare EffectsMarketingEmpirical InvestigationAbuse Of DominancePrice DiscriminationBusinessMarket PowerMicroeconomicsRetail Prices
Economic theory does not provide sharp predictions on the welfare effects of banning wholesale price discrimination: if downstream cost differences exist, then discrimination shifts production inefficiently, toward high‐cost retailers, so a ban increases welfare; if differences in price elasticity of demand across retailers exist, discrimination may increase welfare if quantity sold increases, so a ban reduces welfare. Using retail prices and quantities of coffee brands sold by German retailers, I estimate a model of demand and supply and separate cost and demand differences. Simulating a ban on wholesale price discrimination has positive welfare effects in this market, and less if downstream cost differences shrink, or with less competition.
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