Capacity and Price Competition in Markets with Congestion Effects
Tobias Harks, Anja Schedel

TL;DR
This paper analyzes oligopolistic service markets with congestion effects, focusing on inelastic demand and capacity-price strategies, establishing existence and uniqueness of pure Nash equilibria under these conditions.
Contribution
It extends prior work by proving the existence and uniqueness of pure Nash equilibria in models with perfectly inelastic demand and linear congestion costs, using a novel proof approach.
Findings
Existence of PNE for linear congestion functions.
Uniqueness of the PNE in the inelastic demand setting.
Unbounded efficiency loss compared to social optimum.
Abstract
We study oligopolistic competition in service markets where firms offer a service to customers. The service quality of a firm - from the perspective of a customer - depends on the congestion and the charged price. A firm can set a price for the service offered and additionally decides on the service capacity in order to mitigate congestion. The total profit of a firm is derived from the gained revenue minus the capacity investment cost. Firms simultaneously set capacities and prices in order to maximize their profit and customers subsequently choose the services with lowest combined cost (congestion and price). For this basic model, Johari et al. (2010) derived the first existence and uniqueness results of pure Nash equilibria (PNE) assuming mild conditions on congestion functions. Their existence proof relies on Kakutani's fixed-point theorem and a key assumption for the theorem to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGame Theory and Applications · Economic theories and models · Game Theory and Voting Systems
