Abstract
Abstract This paper analyzes the effect of price leadership on collusion among firms with different discount factors. We first find that price leadership relaxes the incentive constraints for collusion. We then derive a dynamic collusion path in which the firms with lower discount factors initially occupy the largest market share and then gradually cede it to the firms with higher discount factors. This collusion path is shaped by the conflicting forces of fairness and efficiency. Additionally, price leadership can restore the efficiency implied by differentiated time preferences in repeated games.
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