
We study barter as a discriminatory instrument in oligopoly with asymmetric information. Buyers (producers of final goods) differ in the quality of their products. Sellers (producers of inputs) use barter as a screening device: the higher quality buyers pay in cash while the lower quality ones pay in kind. Barter, identified with non-monetary contracts that give a seller control over a buyer's output, emerges in equilibrium even in the absence of financial constraints.There is a positive relationship between market concentration and the level of barter. Barter disappears as the market becomes more competitive. Barter and no-barter equilibria coexist for a range of market structures.
330, Oligopoly, Barter; Price discrimination; Oligopoly, Price discrimination, 300, Barter; Oligopoly; Price Discrimination, Barter, [SHS.ECO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Finance, jel: jel:D43, jel: jel:L13, jel: jel:P42
330, Oligopoly, Barter; Price discrimination; Oligopoly, Price discrimination, 300, Barter; Oligopoly; Price Discrimination, Barter, [SHS.ECO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Finance, jel: jel:D43, jel: jel:L13, jel: jel:P42
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