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PROFILE | Zhongmin Wang’s research focuses primarily on energy-related economic issues. He has studied pricing, competition, regulatory, and environmental issues related to oil, gasoline, natural gas, and alternative transport fuels. He has estimated gasoline demand, examined the competitive impact of supermarkets’ entry into gasoline retailing, and studied the evolution of the natural gas industry in the United States, as well as the pricing of liquefied petroleum gas in Australia. Wang has started to research China’s energy and environmental issues, and is also interested in the economics of online markets. His work has appeared in the Journal of Political Economy. |
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| Featured Publications | | (Mixed) Strategy in Oligopoly Pricing: Evidence from Gasoline Price Cycles Before and Under a Timing Regulation | | | Journal of Political Economy | December 2009 | 117(6) | 987-1030 | | | | Station Level Gasoline Demand in an Australian Market with Regular Price Cycles | | | Journal of Agricultural and Resources Economics | October 2009 | Vol. 53 | pp. 35-52 | | | | Collusive Communication and Pricing Coordination in a Retail Gasoline Market | | | Review of Industrial Organization | February 2008 | 32(1) | pp. 35-52 | | | | Assessing the Degree of Spot Market Integration for US Natural Gas: Evidence from Daily Price Data | | | Journal of Regulatory Economics | March 2006 | Vol. 29, No. 2 | pp. 195-210 | | | | Settling Utility Rate Cases: An Alternative Ratemaking Procedure | | | Journal of Regulatory Economics | September 2004 | Vol. 26, No. 2 | pp. 141-163 | | | | View All Related Publications |
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REPORTS | | There are no publications available for this type. |
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