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Quantitative Benefitcost Analysis of Mergers

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... comparisons, e.g. Staples/Office Depot. Model-based simulations. Vanderbilt University ... e.g., Staples-Office Depot. Good natural experiments or comparisons ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Quantitative Benefitcost Analysis of Mergers


1
Quantitative Benefit-cost Analysis of Mergers
  • Luke Froeb
  • Oct. 26, 2001
  • Federal Trade Commission

2
References
  • mba.vanderbilt.edu/luke.froeb/papers/
  • Coauthors, Tschantz Werden
  • Simulating Merger Effects Among
    Capacity-constrained Firms
  • Pass Through rates and the Price Effects of
    Mergers
  • Merger Effects When Firms Compete by Choosing
    Both Price and Advertising
  • Does retail sector matter for manufacturing
    mergers? very preliminary

3
Quantitative benefit-cost analysis
  • Goal quantitative estimate of merger effect.
  • Necessary to weigh efficiencies against loss of
    competition
  • Two methodologies
  • Empirical comparisons, e.g. Staples/Office Depot
  • Model-based simulations

4
Empirical Comparisonse.g., Staples-Office Depot
  • Good natural experiments or comparisons
  • Benefit-cost analysis still requires structural
    estimate of pass through
  • Depends on demand curvature
  • big pass-through iff big anticompetitive effect

5
Model-based simulation
  • Model current competition
  • Estimate model parameters
  • Simulate loss of competition from merger

6
e.g. Parking Merger
  • Key parameters
  • cost of walking
  • Sensitivity of choice to price
  • location of merging lots
  • location of non-merging lots
  • capacity of lots
  • location of office buildings

7
Simple approach Bertrand Price-setting game
  • Static game
  • What about dynamic strategies?
  • Price-setting competition
  • What about product, promotion, placement?
  • Unilateral Effects
  • What about coordinated effects?
  • Does retail sector matter?
  • Kroger-Winn Dixie vs. Quaker-Pepsi

8
Simple approach Modeling Critique
  • How well does model capture loss of competition
    from merger?
  • Coke strategy is share of throat
  • More about placement and product than price
  • MCI-Sprint
  • Tele-market new plans to rivals customers
  • More about promotion than price
  • Is Bertrand a good metaphor for loss of
    competition?

9
Simple approach Does retail sector matter?
  • When is retail sector transparent?
  • Constant or constant percentage markup
  • two-part tariffs, and retail sector must carry
    profitable products
  • Retail sector earns no profit
  • When does it matter?
  • Double marginalization?price effect
  • Two-part tariffs, and option of exclusivity?no
    price effect

10
Simple approach What about advertising?
  • FOCs if qq(a,p)
  • 0q(p-mc)dq/dp, 0-1(p-mc)dq/da
  • FOC if qq(a(p),p)
  • 0q(p-mc)dq/dp mcmc(da/dp)/(dq/dp)
  • Pre-merger Price-only model with mc
    priceadvertising model
  • Does advertising increase with quantity?

11
Simple approach Implementation
  • Estimate AIDS demand
  • Scanner data
  • Instruments
  • None needed for weekly data
  • LR vs. SR elasticities (Nevo Hendel)
  • Prices in other cities
  • Correlated through costs
  • Results
  • High variance
  • Inelastic demand?
  • Goods are complements?

12
Implementation Critique too many parameters
  • AIDS has too many parameters
  • Confidence intervals include both pro- and anti-
    scenarios.
  • Elasticity matrix for merging products is most
    important.
  • Alternatives Logit, nested logit, PD GEV
    (Bres.Stern), mixed logit (BLP) census data
    (Nevo)
  • But all goods are substitutes
  • Only fool would admit post-merger price rise to
    FTC
  • Agencies discount efficiencies as not
    merger-specific
  • So parties are reluctant to admit even small
    price increase.
  • Proposal assume 5 MC reduction
  • Then simulate post-merger prices

13
PD GEVBresnahan Stern
  • (multiple) dimensions of differentiation
  • Implies substitution patterns

14
Implementation Critique Higher derivatives of
demand
  • f(x),f(x), and f(x) influence predicted price
    rise.
  • Need location, velocity, and acceleration
  • but observe only location
  • If we cannot estimate f(x)
  • Product margins
  • Hall vs. Hausman in MCI-Sprint
  • If we cannot estimate f(x)
  • Sensitivity analysis or
  • Use linear or logit for extrapolation to be
    conservative or
  • compensating cost differentials dont depend on
    acceleration

15
Implementation Critique Average revenue instead
of price
  • Average revenue is quantity share-weighted price
    index.
  • Price changes cause weights to change.
  • Leads to inelasticity bias
  • Use fixed weight index when possible.
  • Or use disaggregated data
  • store-level data exist
  • but we dont use them
  • Individual choice data exist
  • but we dont use them
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