Affiliation:
1. University of Augsburg, Germany
2. Technical University Berlin
Abstract
We introduce a quantitative approach to comparative statics that allows to bound the maximum effect of an exogenous parameter change on a system’s equilibrium. The motivation for this approach is a well-known paradox in multimarket Cournot competition, where a positive price shock on a monopoly market may actually reduce the monopolist’s profit. We use our approach to quantify for the first time the worst-case profit reduction for multimarket oligopolies exposed to arbitrary positive price shocks. For markets with affine price functions and firms with convex cost technologies, we show that the relative profit loss of
any
firm is at most 25%, no matter how many firms compete in the oligopoly. We further investigate the impact of positive price shocks on total profit of all firms as well as on social welfare. We find tight bounds also for these measures showing that total profit and social welfare decreases by at most 25% and 16.6%, respectively. Finally, we show that in our model, mixed, correlated, and coarse correlated equilibria are essentially unique, thus, all our bounds apply to these game solutions, as well.
Funder
Marie-Curie grant Protocol Design
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft within the research training group “Methods for Discrete Structures”
Publisher
Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Subject
Computational Mathematics,Marketing,Economics and Econometrics,Statistics and Probability,Computer Science (miscellaneous)