Résumé
An incumbent seller contracts with a buyer under the threat of entry. The contract stipulates a price and a penalty for breach if the buyer later switches to the entrant. Sellers are heterogenous in terms of the gross surplus they provide to the buyer. The buyer is privately informed on her valuation for the incumbent’s service. Asymmetric information makes the incumbent favor entry as it helps screening buyers. When the entrant has some bargaining power vis-à-vis the buyer and keeps a share of the gains from entry, the incumbent instead wants to reduce entry. The compounding effect of these two forces may lead to either excessive entry or foreclosure, and possibly to a fixed rebate for exclusivity which is afforded to all buyers.
Référence
David Martimort, Jérôme Pouyet et Thomas Tregouet, « Contracts as a barrier to entry: Impact of Buyer’s asymmetric information and bargaining power », International Journal of Industrial Organization, vol. 79, n° 102791, décembre 2021.
Voir aussi
Publié dans
International Journal of Industrial Organization, vol. 79, n° 102791, décembre 2021