This Website uses cookies. By using this website you are agreeing to our use of cookies and to the terms and conditions listed in our data protection policy. Read more

Working Paper No. 541

Should Mergers be Controlled?

Working Paper
Reference
Fridolfsson, Sven-Olof and Johan Stennek (2000). “Should Mergers be Controlled?”. IFN Working Paper No. 541. Stockholm: Research Institute of Industrial Economics (IFN).

Authors
Sven-Olof Fridolfsson, Johan Stennek

Anticompetitive mergers benefit competitors more than the merging firms. We show that such externalities reduce firms' incentives to merge (a holdup mechanism). Firms delay merger proposals, thereby foregoing valuable profits and hoping other firms will merge instead - a war of attrition. The final result, however, is an overly concentrated market. We also demonstrate a surprising intertemporal link: Merger incentives may be reduced by the prospect of additional profitable mergers in the future. Merger control may help protect competition. Holdup and intertemporal links make policy design more difficult, however. Even reasonable policies may be worse than not controlling mergers at all.