Endogenizing the Cost Parameter in Cournot Oligopoly
Stefanos Leonardos, Costis Melolidakis

TL;DR
This paper models an extended two-stage Cournot oligopoly with endogenous costs, analyzing equilibrium outcomes under complete and incomplete information, revealing how market parameters influence prices, quantities, and efficiency.
Contribution
It introduces a novel two-stage game model with endogenous costs and demand uncertainty, deriving equilibrium and optimal pricing policies under different information scenarios.
Findings
Incomplete information leads to market inefficiencies and higher prices.
Increasing supplier costs raises wholesale prices and reduces consumer surplus.
More retailers can initially boost profits but eventually decrease them.
Abstract
We study the effects of endogenous cost formation in the classic Cournot oligopoly through an extended two-stage game. The competing Cournot firms produce low-cost but limited quantities of a single homogeneous product. For additional procurements, they may refer to a revenue-maximizing supplier who sets a wholesale price prior to their orders. We express this chain as a two-stage game and study its equilibrium under two different information levels: complete and incomplete information on the side of the supplier about the actual market demand. In the deterministic case, we derive the unique subgame perfect Nash equilibrium for different values of the retailers' capacity levels, supplier's cost and market demand. To study the incomplete information case, we model demand uncertainty via a continuous probability distribution. Under mild assumptions, we characterize the supplier's optimal…
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