Product Choice and Price Discrimination in Markets with Search Costs
Abstract
In a seminal paper, Champsaur and Rochet (1989) showed that competing firms choose non-overlapping qualities so as to soften price competition at the cost of giving up profitable opportunities to price discriminate. In this... [ view full abstract ]
In a seminal paper, Champsaur and Rochet (1989) showed that competing firms choose non-overlapping qualities so as to soften price competition at the cost of giving up profitable opportunities to price discriminate. In this paper we show that an arbitrarily small amount of search costs is enough to give rise to an equilibrium with overlapping qualities. In markets with search costs, competing firms face the monopolist's incentive to price discriminate, which induces them to offer the full quality range even if this forces them to compete head-to-head. Hence, even though search costs increase prices and reduce consumers surplus for given quality choices, search costs can also lead to lower prices and higher consumer surplus whenever they induce firms to offer broader and overlapping quality offerings. Our analysis also provides predictions regarding pricing by multi-product firms in markets with search costs under various retail market structures. Quality choices and pricing by online bookstores motivate our findings.
Authors
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Juan-Pablo Montero
(PUC-Chile)
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Natalia Fabra
(Universidad Carlos III)
Topic Areas
D. Microeconomics: D4. Market Structure, Pricing, and Design , L. Industrial Organization: L1. Market Structure, Firm Strategy, and Market Performance
Session
CS4-06 » Industrial Organization 1 (14:15 - Friday, 10th November, Picasso)
Paper
Fabra_Montero.pdf
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