Description

Supermarket retailers make strategic pricing decisions in a high-frequency, repeated game environment both in buying and selling fresh produce. In this context, there is some question as to whether a non-cooperative equilibrium can emerge that produces margins above the competitive

Supermarket retailers make strategic pricing decisions in a high-frequency, repeated game environment both in buying and selling fresh produce. In this context, there is some question as to whether a non-cooperative equilibrium can emerge that produces margins above the competitive level. Supermarket pricing results from tacitly collusive equilibria supported by trigger price strategies played in upstream markets. Upstream activities are, in turn, driven by periodic retail price promotions. We test this hypothesis using a sample of fresh produce pricing data from 20 supermarket chains in markets distributed throughout the U.S. Our results support the existence of tacitly collusive non-cooperative equilibria in upstream and downstream markets.

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Details

Title
  • Sales Promotion and Cooperative Retail Pricing Strategies
Date Created
2004-08-05
Resource Type
  • Text
  • Identifier
    • Identifier Value
      ASU 21.3:F 12/04-06
    Note
    • Faculty working paper series (Morrison School of Agribusiness and Resource Management) ; MSABR 04-06
    • Includes bibliographical references (p. 25-28).

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