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General Equilibrium in Vertical Market Structures: Overselling versus Overbuying

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  • Just, Richard E.
  • Rausser, Gordon C.

Abstract

The lens used by the courts and much of the antitrust literature on predatory selling and/or buying is based on partial equilibrium methodology. We demonstrate that such methodology is unreliable for assessments of predatory monopoly or monopsony conduct. In contrast to the typical two-stage dynamic analysis involving a predation period followed by a recoupment period, we advance a general equilibrium analysis that demonstrates the critical role of related industries and markets. Substitutability versus complementarity of both inputs and outputs is critical. With either monopolistic or monopsonistic market power (but not both), neither predatory overselling nor predatory overbuying is profitably sustainable. Two-stage predation/recoupment is profitable only with irreversibility in production and cost functions, unlike typical estimated forms from the production economic literature. However, when the market structure admits both monopolistic and monopsonistic behavior, predatory overbuying can be profitably sustainable while overselling cannot. Useful distinctions are drawn between contract versus non-contract markets for input markets.

Suggested Citation

  • Just, Richard E. & Rausser, Gordon C., 2007. "General Equilibrium in Vertical Market Structures: Overselling versus Overbuying," CUDARE Working Papers 7194, University of California, Berkeley, Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics.
  • Handle: RePEc:ags:ucbecw:7194
    DOI: 10.22004/ag.econ.7194
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    1. Richard E, Just & Darrell L. Heuth & Andrew Schmitz, 2004. "The Welfare Economics of Public Policy," Books, Edward Elgar Publishing, number 3342.
    2. Just, Richard E. & Rausser, Gordon C., 2007. "General equilibrium in vertical market structures: monopoly, monopsony, predatory behavior and the law," Department of Agricultural & Resource Economics, UC Berkeley, Working Paper Series qt8bc979mb, Department of Agricultural & Resource Economics, UC Berkeley.
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