We analyze optimal competition policy by a Competition Agency (CA) in a model with two countries, North and South, were a final good is produced by Northern oligopolistic firms using an input that can either be produced within the firm (vertical integration) or outsourced to Southern oligopolistic producers with lower labor costs (outsourcing). In the case where the final good is only consumed in the North, a CA in the South would optimally appropriate outsourcing rents through restrictions on the degree of competition among domestic firms. If the final good is consumed in both countries, we find that optimal competition policy in the South is marginally affected by the share of Southern consumption, leaving relatively important incentives to engage in rent-shifting. For a high enough share of Southern consumption, however, the interaction between the Northern and Southern CA is shown to be of the Prisoner's Dilemma type, whereby the Nash equilibrium is Pareto-suboptimal and mutual cooperation on competition policy is globally desirable. © 2010 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.

Outsourcing and Competition Policy / Beverelli, C.; Mahlstein, K.. - In: JOURNAL OF INDUSTRY, COMPETITION & TRADE. - ISSN 1566-1679. - 11:2(2011), pp. 131-147. [10.1007/s10842-010-0068-z]

Outsourcing and Competition Policy

Beverelli C.;
2011

Abstract

We analyze optimal competition policy by a Competition Agency (CA) in a model with two countries, North and South, were a final good is produced by Northern oligopolistic firms using an input that can either be produced within the firm (vertical integration) or outsourced to Southern oligopolistic producers with lower labor costs (outsourcing). In the case where the final good is only consumed in the North, a CA in the South would optimally appropriate outsourcing rents through restrictions on the degree of competition among domestic firms. If the final good is consumed in both countries, we find that optimal competition policy in the South is marginally affected by the share of Southern consumption, leaving relatively important incentives to engage in rent-shifting. For a high enough share of Southern consumption, however, the interaction between the Northern and Southern CA is shown to be of the Prisoner's Dilemma type, whereby the Nash equilibrium is Pareto-suboptimal and mutual cooperation on competition policy is globally desirable. © 2010 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.
2011
11
2
131
147
Outsourcing and Competition Policy / Beverelli, C.; Mahlstein, K.. - In: JOURNAL OF INDUSTRY, COMPETITION & TRADE. - ISSN 1566-1679. - 11:2(2011), pp. 131-147. [10.1007/s10842-010-0068-z]
Beverelli, C.; Mahlstein, K.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11380/1321392
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