Regulating a Monopolist with Unknown Demand

dc.contributor.author

Lewis, TR

dc.contributor.author

Sappington, D

dc.date.accessioned

2010-03-09T15:44:21Z

dc.date.available

2010-03-09T15:44:21Z

dc.date.issued

1988

dc.description.abstract

Optimal regulatory policy is derived in a setting where the firm has better knowledge of demand than the regulator. When marginal production costs increase with output, the regulator can induce the firm to use its private information entirely in the social interest. When marginal costs decline with output, however, the regulator is unable to derive any benefit from the firm's superior knowledge, and a single price is established that is invariant to demand.

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878190 bytes

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application/pdf

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/2092

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en_US

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American Economic Association

dc.subject

monopolist

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regulation

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unknown demand

dc.title

Regulating a Monopolist with Unknown Demand

dc.type

Journal article

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