Results 81 to 90 of about 522,405 (176)

Environmental Regulation, Market Power and Price Discrimination in the Agricultural Chemical Industry [PDF]

open access: yes
Chemical companies generally support environmental regulatory segregation Canadian and U.S. agricultural chemical markets, apparently because it enables them to practice third order price discrimination.
Johnson, James B., Smith, Vincent H.
core   +1 more source

“Stupid” German Money? Bonus Interest Rate Payments on Savings Deposits During the Stagflation of 1967 to 1984

open access: yesJahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte
The deregulation of interest rates in 1967 gave West German banks the opportunity of price discrimination among their customers. In the savings deposit market, banks used secret bonus payments paid on top of the regular interest rate to compete for funds.
Knake Sebastian
doaj   +1 more source

Price Discrimination and Fairness Concerns [PDF]

open access: yes
We analyze the profitability of third degree price discrimination under consideration of consumers' fairness concerns within an experiment and explain the results within a theoretical framework.
Englmaier, Florian   +2 more
core  

Do Consumers Pay for Being Healthy Conscious?— An Analysis of Price Discrimination on Healthier Food Product [PDF]

open access: yes
‘Healthier food product’ has experienced a rapid growth rate in recent years in U.S. because of the increasing consumer demand for healthier and environmental friendlier lifestyle.
Zhan, Congnan
core   +1 more source

Wholesale price discrimination and enforcement of regulation [PDF]

open access: yes
The present paper studied third-degree price discrimination in wholesale markets and its welfare property when a monopolistic manufacturer sells his/her products to two retailers who have different qualities and costs of sales.
Hiroshi Aiura
core  

Managing Strategic Buyers [PDF]

open access: yes
We consider the problem of a monopolist who must sell her inventory before some deadline, facing n buyers with independent private values. The monopolist posts prices but has no commitment power. The seller faces a basic trade-off between imperfect price
Johannes Horner, Larry Samuelson
core  

Uniform pricing and social welfare [PDF]

open access: yes
We re-examine the case for uniform pricing in a monopolistic third-degree price-discrimination setting by introducing differentiated costs. A profit-maximizing monopolist could then use price differentiation to reduce the production of the more costly ...
Bertoletti, Paolo
core   +1 more source

Price discrimination on syndicated loans and the number of lenders : empirical evidence from the sovereign debt syndication [PDF]

open access: yes, 2002
Syndicated loans and the number of lending relationships have raised growing attention. All other terms being equal (e.g. seniority), syndicated loans provide larger payments (in basis points) to lenders funding larger amounts.
Hallak, Issam
core   +1 more source

Unpriced Quality [PDF]

open access: yes
A monopolist deliberately charges the same price for differentiated products when high quality products are more likely to be allocated to low type consumers under uniform pricing.
Pascal Courty
core  

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