Publication | Closed Access
Learning to Coordinate: A Study in Retail Gasoline
154
Citations
16
References
2019
Year
Market EquilibriumRetail Gasoline IndustryConsumer ResearchLawIndustrial OrganizationEconomic AnalysisMarket SegmentationAntitrust EnforcementEconomicsEquilibrium SelectionRetail GasolineCollusion Detection StrategiesPrice FormationSustainable RetailingMarketingCartelCompetition PolicyBusinessData-driven Decision-makingMerger EnforcementMarket Power
This paper studies equilibrium selection in the retail gasoline industry. We exploit a unique dataset that contains the universe of station-level prices for an urban market for 15 years, and that encompasses a coordinated equilibrium transition mid-sample. We uncover a gradual, three-year equilibrium transition, whereby dominant firms use price leadership and price experiments to create focal points that coordinate market prices, soften price competition, and enhance retail margins. Our results inform the theory of collusion, with particular relevance to the initiation of collusion and equilibrium selection. We also highlight new insights into merger policy and collusion detection strategies. (JEL G34, L12, L13, L71, L81, Q35)
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1