Uncertainty, Information Sharing and Tacit Collusion in Laboratory Duopoly Markets
Preprint
- 1 April 1998
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
This paper reports 45 laboratory duopoly markets that examine the importance of information sharing in facilitating tacit collusion under conditions of demand uncertainty. Sellers in these repeated laboratory markets generally shared information when possible to reduce their demand uncertainty, which led to output reductions in some demand states. Risk aversion is a likely explanation for this sharing, but some sellers also appeared to employ a strategy of information concealment to punish non-colluding rivals. Nevertheless, output choices were similar in control treatments that forced sellers to share or conceal information, so the information sharing itself did not substantially increase tacit collusion.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Uncertainty, Information Sharing and Tacit Collusion in Laboratory Duopoly MarketsSSRN Electronic Journal, 1998
- Cheap talk price signaling in laboratory marketsInformation Economics and Policy, 1995
- The Impact of Information Sharing Opportunities on Market Outcomes: An Experimental StudySouthern Economic Journal, 1994
- Cartel failure: A mistake or do they do it to each other on purpose?The Journal of Socio-Economics, 1991
- Risk-Averse Duopolists and Voluntary Information TransmissionJournal of Industrial Economics, 1989
- Laboratory Tests of Equilibrium Predictions with Disequilibrium DataThe Review of Economic Studies, 1987
- Extremal equilibria of oligopolistic supergamesJournal of Economic Theory, 1986
- Noncooperative Collusion under Imperfect Price InformationEconometrica, 1984
- Oligopoly TheoryPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1983
- Collusion and the Incentives for Information SharingThe Bell Journal of Economics, 1983