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We model merger-induced entry in the context of differentiated-products price competition.
We fully characterize the combinations of merger efficiencies and entrant qualities
that can mitigate the adverse equilibrium welfare effects of an otherwise anticompetitive
merger. The possibility of merger-induced entry introduces non-monotonicity into the
equilibrium value that consumers receive from merger efficiencies, potentially necessitating
the joint analysis of efficiencies and entry in merger review. We also explicitly characterize
the efficiencies required for merger-induced entrants to make profitable mergers
consumer surplus-neutral. We provide an empirical application to the T-Mobile/Sprint
merger.