1 / 23

Multisided Platforms and Market Power Some empirical evidence

2nd Lear Conference on the Economics of Competition Law Rome, June 7-8, 2007. Multisided Platforms and Market Power Some empirical evidence. Marc Ivaldi. Content. Printed media industries Market delineation Standard approach Model-based approach.

lacey
Download Presentation

Multisided Platforms and Market Power Some empirical evidence

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 2nd Lear Conference on the Economics of Competition Law Rome, June 7-8, 2007 Multisided Platforms and Market PowerSome empirical evidence Marc Ivaldi

  2. Content • Printed media industries • Market delineation • Standard approach • Model-based approach

  3. Market definition in printed media industries • Distinctive features • Differentiated products • Content (general vs specialized information) • Quality (tabloids vs art magazines) • Frequency • Scope • Local vs national • Bidimensional products • Readership • Advertising • Substitutes • Other medias

  4. Market definition in printed media industries • Examples • Differentiated products • Recoletos / Unedisa case • Dialy and non dialy publications • General information, sport and financial papers • Tabloids and quality press • Gruner+Jahr / Financial Times / JV • Ballarino / Grandi quotidiani • Local and national publication (separate markets) • Conclusion • Demand side perspective • Printed media markets segmented in tiny sub-markets

  5. Market definition in printed media industries • Examples • Substitutability • Recoletos / Unedisa case • Newsquest Ltd / Independent News • Conclusion : Not taken into account • Written press distinct from other media products • Why? Not the same depth and range of information • However supply side arguments

  6. Market definition in printed media industries • Examples • Advertising • Newspaper publishing decision • Class Editori / Sole 24 Ore case • Recoletos / Unedisa • Conclusion • Different types of advertising define different types of readers and vice-versa • Readership and advertising are separate markets

  7. Market definition in printed media industries • Methods • Usually qualitative • Now quantitative • Archant Limited / Independent News and Media Limited • Commission claims to have performed a SSNIP test • Commission concludes that the relevant market is th local one

  8. An econometric illustration • Merger SOCPRESSE / Groupe Express-Expansion • French weekly magazines of general information • Decision : the merger has been authorized

  9. An econometric illustration • Econometric analysis by the competition authority • Individual demand are price inelastic • Aggregate demand is elastic • Conclusion • Cross-price elasticities are small • The market is larger??

  10. An econometric illustration Share of Unit Purchases in Total Sales (Average – 1996-2001)

  11. Outside good Subscription Unit purchase Titles Titles … … An econometric illustration

  12. An econometric illustration • Alternative model • Accounts for differentiation Relative market shares Differentiation effect Quality-Price tradeoff

  13. An econometric illustration • Alternative model • Accounts for differentiation • Accounts for endogeneity • First set of instruments : All exogenous variables + previous’ year circulation • Second set of instruments : All exogenous variables + advertising revenue and its lagged value

  14. Econometric illustration …. • …. of neglecting feedback effects between the two sides of the market • This can translate in bad estimates of market power …

  15. Example: The market for academic journals • Academic journals = intermediary role • Research output dissemination • Cerification • Academic journal = Two-sided structure

  16. Structure AUTHORS 0 € PUBLISHERS ARCHIVE K € LIBRARIES 0 € READERS

  17. Academic journals • A model • Main result: not recognizing the endogeneity of the impact factor yields zero correlation between the impact factor and the demand for journals !! Impact factor

  18. Acadamic journals: main result

  19. More general models • Argentesi – Filistrucchi (2006) • Kaiser – Wright (2006) • Rysman (2004)

  20. More general models • Argentesi – Filistrucchi (2006) • Collusion on readership / Competition on advertisng

  21. Concluding remarks • Market delineation under structural econometric provides a very differnt view of relevant markets • Needs more work • « Real » interaction effects • Dynamics • Sensitivity analysis • Mark Rysman

More Related