chrydenmom
Feb 16, 2011, 11:42 AM
Suppose two competitors, Coa, Inc. and Han, Inc. are locked in a bitter pricing struggle in the aluminum industry. In the limit pricing payoff matrix, Coa can choose a given row of outcomes by offering a limit price ("up") or monopoly price ("down"). Han can choose a given column of outcomes by choosing to offer a limit price ("left") or monopoly price ("right"). Neither firm can choose which cell of the payoff matrix to obtain; the payoff for each firm depends upon the pricing strategies of both firms.
Han
Coa
Pricing Strategy
Limit Price
Monopoly Price
Limit Price
$1.5 billion, $3 billion
$2.5 billion, $2 billion
Monopoly Price
$1 billion, $4 billion
$1.75 billion, $3 billion
Is there dominant strategy equilibrium in this problem? If so, what is it?
Is there Nash equilibrium in this problem? If so, what is it?
Han
Coa
Pricing Strategy
Limit Price
Monopoly Price
Limit Price
$1.5 billion, $3 billion
$2.5 billion, $2 billion
Monopoly Price
$1 billion, $4 billion
$1.75 billion, $3 billion
Is there dominant strategy equilibrium in this problem? If so, what is it?
Is there Nash equilibrium in this problem? If so, what is it?