Results 271 to 280 of about 7,624,727 (349)
Market share regulation? [PDF]
Abstract In the 1950s and 60s, Japanese and US antitrust authorities occassionally used the degree of concentration to regulate industries. Does regulating firms based on their market shares make theoretical sense? We set up a simple duopoly model with stochastic R&D activities to evaluate market share regulation policy. On the one hand, market share
Hideo Konishi, Çaglar Yurtseven
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Journal of Marketing Research, 2020
Consumers increasingly expect brands to “pick a side” on divisive sociopolitical issues, but managers are reluctant to risk alienating customers who oppose their position. Moreover, research on identity-based consumption and negativity bias suggests that
Chris Hydock, Neeru Paharia, S. Blair
semanticscholar +1 more source
Consumers increasingly expect brands to “pick a side” on divisive sociopolitical issues, but managers are reluctant to risk alienating customers who oppose their position. Moreover, research on identity-based consumption and negativity bias suggests that
Chris Hydock, Neeru Paharia, S. Blair
semanticscholar +1 more source
The Rise of Market Power and the Macroeconomic Implications*
We document the evolution of market power based on firm-level data for the U.S. economy since 1955. We measure both markups and profitability. In 1980, aggregate markups start to rise from 21% above marginal cost to 61% now.
Jan De Loecker, Jan Eeckhout
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Modeling brand market share change in emerging markets
International Marketing Review, 2018Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine what happens to key brand performance metrics as brands change in market share, in the context of packaged goods.
Jenni Romaniuk +2 more
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How Do Firms Build Market Share?
Social Science Research Network, 2018The question of how firms build market share matters for firm dynamics, business cycles, international trade, and industrial organization. Using Nielsen Retail Scanner data for the United States, we document that in the consumer food industry, brands ...
Doireann Fitzgerald, A. Priolo
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Information Sharing in Credit Markets
The Journal of Finance, 1993Abstract A large body of literature on credit markets has shown that asymmetric information may prevent the efficient allocation of lending, leading to credit rationing (e.g., Jaffee and Russell (1976), Stiglitz and Weiss (1981)) or to a wedge between lending and borrowing rates (e.g., King (1986)).
JAPPELLI, TULLIO, PAGANO M.
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Journal of Business Strategy, 1982
The notion of “market share” has ravaged the board‐rooms of corporate America for a generation. There are hundreds of classic examples of where share leaders—probably low‐cost producers—have picked up all the marbles and won. However, there are other examples of market‐share blunders that should alert businessmen to be wary of unrestrained share ...
HARPER BOYD +2 more
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The notion of “market share” has ravaged the board‐rooms of corporate America for a generation. There are hundreds of classic examples of where share leaders—probably low‐cost producers—have picked up all the marbles and won. However, there are other examples of market‐share blunders that should alert businessmen to be wary of unrestrained share ...
HARPER BOYD +2 more
openaire +1 more source
Sharing Markets and Market Shares
1993The insularity of the English (‘the wogs start at Calais’) resulted in the huge contributions of Augustin Cournot (1801–1877) of France being neglected for at least forty years. (We might say the same of the huge contributions of Dupuit, Antonelli, Slutsky, and Walras, or von Thunen.) Today every college sophomore studying economics is exposed to two ...
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