Résumé
We investigate mergers in markets where quality differences between products are central and firms may reposition their product lines by adding or removing products of different qualities following a merger. Such mergers are materially different from those studied in the existing literature. Mergers without synergies may exhibit a product-mix effect which raises consumer surplus, but only when the pre-merger industry structure satisfies certain observable features. Post-merger synergies may lower consumer surplus. The level of, and changes in, the Herfindahl–Hirschman Index may give a misleading assessment of how a merger affects consumers. A merger may benefit some outsiders but harm others.
Remplace
Justin Pappas Johnson et Andrew Rhodes, « Multiproduct Mergers and Quality Competition », TSE Working Paper, n° 18-967, novembre 2018, révision février 2021.
Référence
Justin Pappas Johnson et Andrew Rhodes, « Multiproduct mergers and quality competition », The RAND Journal of Economics, vol. 52, n° 3, septembre 2021, p. 633–661.
Voir aussi
Publié dans
The RAND Journal of Economics, vol. 52, n° 3, septembre 2021, p. 633–661