Industry StudiesLarry L. Duetsch M.E. Sharpe, 1998 - 364 páginas A collection of 13 studies of individual industries that mirror the sectoral composition of the current US economy. Each is complete in itself, but read together, they illuminate the competition and interdependence between them. No date is noted for the first edition, but the second contains new profiles for electric power, local phone service, motion pictures, and microcomputer platforms. Others described are automobiles, beer, pharmaceuticals, retail commercial banking, health insurance, and hospitals. Paper edition (unseen), $31.95. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR. |
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Página 34
... concentration above what it would be otherwise . Hence , of all the possible causes of the trend toward fewer numbers and higher concentration , we should consider merg- ers first . When we do , we find a paradox . Although brewing ...
... concentration above what it would be otherwise . Hence , of all the possible causes of the trend toward fewer numbers and higher concentration , we should consider merg- ers first . When we do , we find a paradox . Although brewing ...
Página 38
... concentration of 19.2 percent and four - firm concentration of 38.5 per- cent . Compared to the concentration observed in Table 2.1 , these efficiencies would perhaps help to explain the concentration that occurred up to about 1965 ...
... concentration of 19.2 percent and four - firm concentration of 38.5 per- cent . Compared to the concentration observed in Table 2.1 , these efficiencies would perhaps help to explain the concentration that occurred up to about 1965 ...
Página 52
... concentration reflecting moderate oligopoly ( e.g. , four - firm concentration ratios of 40 to 70 percent ) .47 The beer industry followed this typical posi- tive / negative pattern from 1947 to 1970 but thereafter broke away as if on a ...
... concentration reflecting moderate oligopoly ( e.g. , four - firm concentration ratios of 40 to 70 percent ) .47 The beer industry followed this typical posi- tive / negative pattern from 1947 to 1970 but thereafter broke away as if on a ...
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advertising airlines American Anheuser-Busch antitrust areas AT&T average barriers to entry benefits Blue box office brands brewers broiler broiler industry Budweiser buyers carriers cars chicken competition competitors concentration consumers costs craft beers customers demand deregulation distribution distributors dominant drugs dustry Economics effect efficient entrants exhibitors fares Federal firms hardware health insurance hospitals ILEC important increased industry's innovation installed base Japanese Journal largest less long-distance major market power market share ment mergers microcomputer Miller million minimills monopoly Motion Picture network externalities nomic oligopoly operating output passenger patients percent Perdue Farms pharmaceutical physicians plants poultry premium processors product differentiation profits rates reduced regulation regulatory retail banking revenues route Source strategy structure sumer switching Table telephone theaters tion Tyson Foods U.S. auto U.S. Steel United users utilities