Results 211 to 220 of about 360,358 (247)

A Bilingual HIV Status-Neutral Intervention to Promote Heath Equity Among GBQMSM and Transgender and Nonbinary Persons in Appalachia: Outcomes From the Appalachian Access Project Intervention Trial. [PDF]

open access: yesAIDS Educ Prev
Tanner AE   +16 more
europepmc   +1 more source

THREE ESSAYS ON THIRD-DEGREE PRICE DISCRIMINATION

open access: yesTHREE ESSAYS ON THIRD-DEGREE PRICE DISCRIMINATION
openaire  
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Neutrality of third-degree price discrimination

International Review of Economics Education, 2021
Abstract This note shows that compared to uniform pricing, third-degree price discrimination can be neutral. For linear demands, having all price intercepts of submarkets’ inverse demands to be the same is the necessary and sufficient condition for third-degree price discrimination to be neutral.
Yong Chao, Babu Nahata
openaire   +1 more source

Teaching Third-Degree Price Discrimination

The Journal of Economic Education, 2006
Abstract: Third-degree price discrimination is taught in almost every intermediate microeconomics class. The theory, geometry, and the algebra behind the concept are simple, and the phenomenon is commonly associated with the sale of many of the goods and services used frequently by students.
David K. Round, Ron P. Mclver
openaire   +2 more sources

Third-Degree Price Discrimination with Buyer Power

The B.E. Journal of Economic Analysis & Policy, 2009
Abstract This paper introduces a model of third-degree price discrimination where a seller's pricing power is constrained by buyers' outside options. Price uniformity performs more efficiently than discriminatory pricing, as uniform pricing allows weaker buyers to exploit the more attractive outside option of stronger buyers.
Inderst, R, VALLETTI, TOMMASO MARIA
openaire   +3 more sources

Third Degree Price Discrimination and Price Elasticities

SSRN Electronic Journal, 1999
According to conventional wisdom, if a monopolist operates in two separate markets whose respective demand functions can be ordered by elasticity, he will charge more on the market with the less elastic demand. In this paper we debunk the widespread canard that this follows from the first order profit maximization conditions.
Thomas D. Jeitschko, Dominique Thon
openaire   +1 more source

Third-Degree Price Discrimination: A Clarification

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2008
The objective of this paper is to assess how the marginal revenue of a monopoly should be plotted when the market is segmented between consumers with different demands, both in the discriminating and non-discriminating cases. The presentations offered by industrial organization textbooks concerning third-degree price discrimination are not always clear,
Sylvain Weber, Cyril D. Pasche
openaire   +1 more source

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy