Strategic quality competition and the Porter Hypothesis

This paper offers new support for the Porter Hypothesis within the context of a quality competition framework. We use a duopoly model of vertical product differentiation in which two firms simultaneously choose to produce either a high (environmentally friendly) quality or low (standard) quality var...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of environmental economics and management 2009-03, Vol.57 (2), p.182-194
Hauptverfasser: André, Francisco J., González, Paula, Porteiro, Nicolás
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container_title Journal of environmental economics and management
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creator André, Francisco J.
González, Paula
Porteiro, Nicolás
description This paper offers new support for the Porter Hypothesis within the context of a quality competition framework. We use a duopoly model of vertical product differentiation in which two firms simultaneously choose to produce either a high (environmentally friendly) quality or low (standard) quality variant of a good, before engaging in price competition. In this simple setting, we show that a Nash equilibrium of the game featuring the low-quality good can be Pareto dominated by a different strategy profile, in which both firms opt in favour of the “green” product. Our analysis demonstrates that, in such a case, both firms stand to profit from the introduction of a rule penalizing any firm refusing to produce the environmentally friendly product. We also find that consumers themselves may benefit from such regulations. This is always the case when shifting from low quality to high-quality production brings about a cost-efficiency improvement.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jeem.2008.07.002
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source RePEc; Access via ScienceDirect (Elsevier)
subjects Competition
Consumer behaviour
Duopoly
Enterprises
Environmental quality
Environmental quality Vertical differentiation Prisoner's dilemma Environmental regulation Porter Hypothesis
Environmental regulation
Game theory
Green products
Hypotheses
Nash equilibrium
Porter Hypothesis
Price competition
Prisoner's dilemma
Product differentiation
Product quality
Regulation
Studies
Vertical differentiation
title Strategic quality competition and the Porter Hypothesis
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