Abstract
In this article, the effect of downstream horizontal mergers on the upstream producer's capacity choice was studied. Contrary to conventional wisdom, I find a nonmonotonic relationship: horizontal mergers induce a higher upstream capacity if the cost of capacity is low, and a lower upstream capacity if this cost is high. This result is explained by decomposing the total effect into two competing effects: a change in holdup and a change in bargaining erosion. Copyright © 2007, RAND.
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CITATION STYLE
Montez, J. V. (2007). Downstream mergers and producer’s capacity choice: Why bake a larger pie when getting a smaller slice? RAND Journal of Economics, 38(4), 948–966. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0741-6261.2007.00120.x
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