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The effect of marketing regulations on efficiency: LeChatelier versus coordination effects
Authors:Natsuko Iwasaki  Victor J. Tremblay
Affiliation:(1) Department of History, Economics, and Politics, State University of New York, Farmingdale, 2350 Broadhollow Rd., Farmindale, NY 11735-1021, USA;(2) Department of Economics, Oregon State University, 303 Ballard Extension Hall, Corvallis, OR 97331-3612, USA
Abstract:
Government regulations designed to promote social welfare can have unintended consequences on efficiency. According to the LeChatelier Principle, regulations that effectively limit substitution possibilities among inputs will reduce firm and industry-wide efficiency. In imperfectly competitive markets, however, government constraints on a strategic variable can facilitate coordination. An advertising restriction, for example, would improve efficiency if it enables firms to produce the same level of sales with less advertising spending. We use data envelopment analysis to estimate the effect of marketing regulations on efficiency in the U.S. cigarette industry. Unlike previous studies, we do not assume that marketing and production technologies are separable. Our results demonstrate that coordination effects dominate LeChatelier effects. Cigarette producers have benefited from advertising restrictions, a result consistent with the capture theory of regulation.
Contact Information Victor J. TremblayEmail:
Keywords:Efficiency  Advertising regulations  LeChatelier principle  Coordination in advertising  U.S. cigarette industry
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