How to Auction a Bottleneck Monopoly When Underhand Vertical Agreements are Possible |
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Authors: | Eduardo M. R. A. Engel Ronald D. Fischer Alexander Galetovic |
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Affiliation: | Department of Economics, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, USA; Centre for Applied Economics (CEA), Department of Industrial Engineering, University of Chile, Santiago, Chile; Centre for Applied Economics (CEA), Department of Industrial Engineering, University of Chile, Santiago, Chile |
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Abstract: | A seaport is awarded in a Demsetz auction to the operator bidding the lowest cargo-handling fee. The competitive auction is irrelevant if the port operator integrates into shipping and sabotages competitors, thus providing a motive for a ban on vertical integration. The paper shows that such a ban increases welfare even when underhand agreements with shippers are possible. For this result to attain, the auction must be combined with a sufficiently high floor on the cargo-handling fee that operators can bid in the auction. With no floor, a Demsetz auction is worse than an unregulated bottleneck monopoly. |
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