ZEW Conference on the “Quantitative Analysis in Competition Assessments”
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Nina Leheyda/Kai Hüschelrath
The ZEW Centre for European Economic Research, the Mannheim Centre for
Competition and Innovation (MaCCI) and WHU Otto Beisheim School of Management
in Vallendar are pleased to announce their conference “Quantitative
Analysis in Competition Assessments”. It aims at stimulating discussion
between academic researchers and practitioners in the various competition
authorities, legal counsel and economic consultancy firms regarding the use
of quantitative techniques in the context of competition analysis.
Theoretical, empirical as well as case study-oriented articles are welcome. A
special emphasis of the conference lies on the use of structural oligopoly
models in competition assessments as well as new theoretical contributions
within this field.
*Topics of Interest: *
The conference aims to discuss the recent developments in the empirical
techniques - covering simple as well as most advanced and state-of-the-art
quantitative techniques - and their practical application in competition
casework and market studies/sector inquiries. A non-exhaustive list of such
empirical approaches comprises:
* Price tests
* Price-concentration analysis
* SSNIP advances
* Demand estimation
* Structural models
* Merger simulations
* Empirical analysis of unilateral and coordinated effects
* Econometric models to measure market power
* Quantitative analysis of tacit (implicit) collusion
* Market screening techniques/predicting cartels
* Empirical analysis of effects of vertical restraints
* Empirical tests to determine predatory pricing
* Quantification of damages to consumers
* Bidding studies, etc.
High-quality competition analysis of antitrust cases envisages empirical
analysis of market data within a robust theoretical framework, complemented
with qualitative arguments. We especially welcome any contributions that
illustrate the application of industrial economics, game theory and
econometrics to applied competition analysis of antitrust cases and that
combine both the development of a theoretical model and its empirical
estimation. Papers with empirical advances in the field of the ex-post
evaluation of competition policy are also welcome.
*Invited Speakers:*
* Jonathan Baker (American University's Washington College of Law)
* Peter Davis (UK Competition Commission)
* Mark Williams (NERA Economic Consulting)
* *
*Scientific Committee:*
* Stephen Davies (Centre for Competition Policy, University of East Anglia)
* Tomaso Duso (Humboldt University Berlin and WZB)
* Ulrich Kaiser (University of Zürich, ZEW, Copenhagen Business School and
University of Copenhagen)
* Massimo Motta (ICREA-Universitat Pompeu Fabra and Barcelona Graduate
School of Economics)
* Volker Nocke (University of Mannheim)
* Martin Peitz (University of Mannheim and ZEW)
* Thomas Roende (Copenhagen Business School, ZEW and University of
Copenhagen)
* Philipp Schmidt-Dengler (London School of Economics)
* Frank Verboven (K.U. Leuven and CEPR)
*Local Organising Committee*: Kai Hüschelrath · Nina Leheyda