Cross-Border Mergers as Instruments of Comparative Advantage.

A two-country model of oligopoly in general equilibrium is used to show how changes in market structure accompany the process of trade and capital-market liberalization. The model predicts that bilateral mergers in which low-cost firms buy out higher-cost foreign rivals are profitable under Cournot...

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Main Author: Neary, J
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Blackwell Publishing 2007
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author Neary, J
author_facet Neary, J
author_sort Neary, J
collection OXFORD
description A two-country model of oligopoly in general equilibrium is used to show how changes in market structure accompany the process of trade and capital-market liberalization. The model predicts that bilateral mergers in which low-cost firms buy out higher-cost foreign rivals are profitable under Cournot competition. As a result, trade liberalization can trigger international merger waves, in the process encouraging countries to specialize and trade more in accordance with comparative advantage. With symmetric countries, welfare is likely to rise, though the distribution of income always shifts towards profits.
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spelling oxford-uuid:39f9cfc7-0f3b-40f6-aed6-0a30b914aea52022-03-26T13:58:47ZCross-Border Mergers as Instruments of Comparative Advantage.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:39f9cfc7-0f3b-40f6-aed6-0a30b914aea5EnglishDepartment of Economics - ePrintsBlackwell Publishing2007Neary, JA two-country model of oligopoly in general equilibrium is used to show how changes in market structure accompany the process of trade and capital-market liberalization. The model predicts that bilateral mergers in which low-cost firms buy out higher-cost foreign rivals are profitable under Cournot competition. As a result, trade liberalization can trigger international merger waves, in the process encouraging countries to specialize and trade more in accordance with comparative advantage. With symmetric countries, welfare is likely to rise, though the distribution of income always shifts towards profits.
spellingShingle Neary, J
Cross-Border Mergers as Instruments of Comparative Advantage.
title Cross-Border Mergers as Instruments of Comparative Advantage.
title_full Cross-Border Mergers as Instruments of Comparative Advantage.
title_fullStr Cross-Border Mergers as Instruments of Comparative Advantage.
title_full_unstemmed Cross-Border Mergers as Instruments of Comparative Advantage.
title_short Cross-Border Mergers as Instruments of Comparative Advantage.
title_sort cross border mergers as instruments of comparative advantage
work_keys_str_mv AT nearyj crossbordermergersasinstrumentsofcomparativeadvantage