Abstract
This paper gives an unified explanation of some of the most widely known facts of the cartel literature: prices gradually rise, then remain constant, there can be price wars and some cartels break down. In this model consumers are loss averse and efficiency of a competitive fringe is not publicly observable. In the best collusive equilibrium, the price expectation can be so low that loss aversion makes consumers not buy at the maximal collusive price: firms then set a lower price that rises in time with consumers’ expectations. This increasing price path is bounded from above by the presence of the fringe. If the fringe sets a low price during a sufficient number of periods, there can be price wars and collusion can eventually break down.
Reference
Anton-Giulio Manganelli, “Cartel Pricing Dynamics, Price Wars and Cartel Breakdown”, TSE Working Paper, n. 12-309, May 2012.
See also
Published in
TSE Working Paper, n. 12-309, May 2012