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Information Technology
Chapter Thirty-Four Information Technology
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Information Technologies
Computers, answering machines, FAXes, pagers, cellular phones, … Many provide strong complementarities. E.g. is useful only if lots of people use it -- a network externality. And computers are more useful if many people use the same software.
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Information Technologies
But then switching technologies becomes very costly -- lock-in. E.g. Microsoft Windows. How do markets operate when there are switching costs or network externalities?
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Competition & Switching Costs
Producer’s cost per month of providing a network service is c per customer. Customer’s switching cost is s. Producer offers a one month discount, d. Rate of interest is r.
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Competition & Switching Costs
All producers set the same nondiscounted price of p per month. When is switching producers rational for a customer?
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Competition & Switching Costs
Cost of not switching is
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Competition & Switching Costs
Cost of not switching is Cost from switching is
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Competition & Switching Costs
Cost of not switching is Cost from switching is Switch if
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Competition & Switching Costs
Cost of not switching is Cost from switching is Switch if I.e. if
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Competition & Switching Costs
Switch if I.e. if Producer competition will ensure at a market equilibrium that customers are indifferent between switching or not
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Competition & Switching Costs
At equilibrium, producer economic profits are zero. I.e.
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Competition & Switching Costs
At equilibrium, producer economic profits are zero. I.e. Since , at equilibrium
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Competition & Switching Costs
At equilibrium, producer economic profits are zero. I.e. Since , at equilibrium I.e. present-valued producer profit = consumer switching cost.
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Competition & Network Externalities
Individuals 1,…,1000. Each can buy one unit of a good providing a network externality. Person v values a unit of the good at nv, where n is the number of persons who buy the good.
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Competition & Network Externalities
Individuals 1,…,1000. Each can buy one unit of a good providing a network externality. Person v values a unit of the good at nv, where n is the number of persons who buy the good. At a price p, what is the quantity demanded of the good?
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Competition & Network Externalities
If v is the marginal buyer, valuing the good at nv = p, then all buyers v’ > v value the good more, and so buy it. Quantity demanded is n = v. So inverse demand is p = n(1000-n).
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Competition & Network Externalities
Willingness-to-pay p = n(1000-n) Demand Curve 1000 n
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Competition & Network Externalities
Suppose all suppliers have the same marginal production cost, c.
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Competition & Network Externalities
Willingness-to-pay p = n(1000-n) Demand Curve c Supply Curve 1000 n
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Competition & Network Externalities
What are the market equilibria?
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Competition & Network Externalities
What are the market equilibria? (a) No buyer buys, no seller supplies. If n = 0, then value nv = 0 for all buyers v, so no buyer buys. If no buyer buys, then no seller supplies.
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Competition & Network Externalities
Willingness-to-pay p = n(1000-n) Demand Curve (a) c Supply Curve 1000 n
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Competition & Network Externalities
Willingness-to-pay p = n(1000-n) Demand Curve (a) c Supply Curve n’ 1000 n
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Competition & Network Externalities
What are the market equilibria? (b) A small number, n’, of buyers buy. small n’ small network externality value n’v good is bought only by buyers with n’v c; i.e. only large v v’ = c/n’.
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Competition & Network Externalities
Willingness-to-pay p = n(1000-n) Demand Curve (a) c Supply Curve (b) (c) n’ n” 1000 n
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Competition & Network Externalities
What are the market equilibria? (c) A large number, n”, of buyers buy. Large n” large network externality value n”v good is bought only by buyers with n’v c; i.e. up to small v v” = c/n”.
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Competition & Network Externalities
Willingness-to-pay p = n(1000-n) Demand Curve (a) c Supply Curve (b) (c) n’ n” 1000 n Which equilibrium is likely to occur?
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Competition & Network Externalities
Suppose the market expands whenever willingness-to-pay exceeds marginal production cost, c.
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Competition & Network Externalities
Willingness-to-pay p = n(1000-n) Demand Curve c Supply Curve n’ n” 1000 n Which equilibrium is likely to occur?
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Competition & Network Externalities
Willingness-to-pay p = n(1000-n) Demand Curve Unstable c Supply Curve n’ n” 1000 n Which equilibrium is likely to occur?
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Competition & Network Externalities
Willingness-to-pay p = n(1000-n) Demand Curve c Supply Curve n” 1000 n Which equilibrium is likely to occur?
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Competition & Network Externalities
Willingness-to-pay p = n(1000-n) Demand Curve Stable c Supply Curve n” 1000 n Which equilibrium is likely to occur?
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Competition & Network Externalities
Willingness-to-pay p = n(1000-n) Demand Curve Stable Stable c Supply Curve n” 1000 n Which equilibrium is likely to occur?
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Rights Management Should a good be sold outright,
licensed for production by others, or rented? How is the ownership right of the good to be managed?
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Rights Management Suppose production costs are negligible.
Market demand is p(y). The firm wishes to
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Rights Management
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Rights Management
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Rights Management
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Rights Management The rights owner now allows a free trial period. This causes an increase in consumption
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Rights Management The rights owner now allows a free trial period. This causes an increase in consumption and a decrease in sales per unit of consumption
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Rights Management The rights owner now allows a free trial period. This causes increase in value to all users increase in willingness-to-pay;
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Rights Management
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Rights Management The firm’s problem is now to
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Rights Management The firm’s problem is now to
This problem must have the same solution as
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Rights Management The firm’s problem is now to
This problem must have the same solution as So
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Rights Management
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Rights Management higher profit
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Rights Management lower profit
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Sharing Intellectual Property
Produce a lot for direct sales, or only a little for multiple rentals? Lending books, software. Renting tools, videos etc. Sell movies directly, or only sell to video rental stores, or pay-per-view? When is selling for rental more profitable than selling for personal use only?
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Sharing Intellectual Property
F is the fixed cost of designing the good. c is the constant marginal cost of copying the good. p(y) is the market demand. Direct sales problem is to
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Sharing Intellectual Property
F is the fixed cost of designing the good. c is the constant marginal cost of copying the good. p(y) is the market demand. Direct sales problem is to
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Sharing Intellectual Property
Is selling for rental more profitable? Each rental unit is used by k > 1 consumers. So y units sold x = ky consumption units.
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Sharing Intellectual Property
Is selling for rental more profitable? Each rental unit is used by k > 1 consumers. So y units sold x = ky consumption units. Marginal consumer’s willingness-to-pay is p(x) = p(ky).
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Sharing Intellectual Property
Is selling for rental more profitable? Each rental unit used by k > 1 consumers. So y units sold x = ky consumption units. Marginal consumer’s willingness-to-pay is p(x) = p(ky). Rental transaction cost t reduces willingness-to-pay to p(ky) - t.
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Sharing Intellectual Property
Rental transaction cost t reduces willingness-to-pay to p(ky) - t. Rental store’s willingness-to-pay is
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Sharing Intellectual Property
Rental transaction cost t reduces willingness-to-pay to p(ky) - t. Rental store’s willingness-to-pay is Producer’s sale-for-rental problem is
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Sharing Intellectual Property
Rental transaction cost t reduces willingness-to-pay to p(ky) - t. Rental store’s willingness-to-pay is Producer’s sale-for-rental problem is
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Sharing Intellectual Property
Rental transaction cost t reduces willingness-to-pay to p(ky) - t. Rental store’s willingness-to-pay is Producer’s sale-for-rental problem is
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Sharing Intellectual Property
is the same problem as the direct sale problem except for the marginal costs.
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Sharing Intellectual Property
is the same problem as the direct sale problem except for the marginal costs. Direct sale is better for the producer if
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Sharing Intellectual Property
Direct sale is better for the producer if I.e. if
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Sharing Intellectual Property
Direct sale is better for the producer if Direct sale is better if replication cost c is low rental transaction cost t is high rentals per item, k, is small.
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