posted on 2015-07-02, 08:36authored byG. Calzolari, Vicenzo Denicolo
We propose a new theory of exclusive dealing. The theory is based
on the assumption that a dominant firm has a competitive advantage
over its rivals, and that the buyers’ willingness to pay for the product is
private information. In this setting, the dominant firm can impose contractual
restrictions on buyers without necessarily compensating them,
implying that exclusive dealing contracts can be both profitable and anticompetitive.
We discuss the general implications of the theory for competition
policy and illustrate by examples its applicability to antitrust
cases
History
Citation
American Economic Review 105(11): 3321-51.
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCE/Department of Economics