1 / 15

Transparency, prices and consumer welfare

Transparency, prices and consumer welfare. Jan Boone Jan Potters TILEC, Tilburg University. Transparency. More transparency is usually seen as an improvement: it intensifies competition reduces prices reduces price dispersion increases consumer surplus. Story.

manchu
Download Presentation

Transparency, prices and consumer welfare

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. Transparency, prices and consumer welfare Jan Boone Jan Potters TILEC, Tilburg University

  2. Transparency • More transparency is usually seen as an improvement: • it intensifies competition • reduces prices • reduces price dispersion • increases consumer surplus

  3. Story • As consumers get to know the market better, they will be better able to find the firm that produces the product which gives them the best price/quality ratio. • As firms understand that consumers will walk away to a competitor that offers a better deal, they offer better products at lower prices

  4. However, • we also know of cases where the institutional setting restricts the choice sets of customers: • although patients are allowed to get a second opinion, they are not allowed to get 10 opinions before, say, an operation • although someone convicted of a crime can appeal, the number of appeals is limited • in economics you are allowed to send your paper to one journal only at a time for refereeing • rationing in war time • asylum seekers can apply for asylum in one country only at a time • Although there are a number of reasons for this, one is the protection of the customers themselves

  5. Common element • In all of these cases there is a scarce resource involved: • doctors/specialists • judges • referees • supplies of bread and cigarettes in war time • civil servants checking asylum requests • these resources are limited and hence we prefer everyone getting something instead of some people getting a lot and others getting nothing • Lifting the restrictions raises prices and reduces consumer welfare

  6. Transparency • The formalizations of more transparency leading to lower prices and higher consumer surplus were done in a framework where • goods are perfect substitutes • firms produce with constant marginal costs • In that case more transparency (for given prices) does not raise demand • and higher demand does not lead to higher costs

  7. Our paper • An increase in transparency has two effects: • competition effect: firms produce more and lower their prices as the market becomes more transparent • demand effect: more transparency is like removing restrictions and hence raises demand and therefore prices • The competition effect raises consumer welfare, the demand effect reduces consumer welfare • Which effect dominates is determined by how fast marginal costs increase with output • For the demand effect we need to assume that goods are imperfect substitutes (think of the 'second opinion': if this is known to be identical to the 'first opinion' there is not much demand for second opinions)

  8. Illustration demand effect • Suppose I am looking for a purple second hand car • However, in Breda there are no purple second hand cars, so I don't buy one • Now the internet is introduced (transparency ) and using the internet I find that a purple car is on sale in Groningen • Now I start to bid for this car and hence demand for the car in Groningen goes up because of the internet • Suppose there is a customer in Groningen as well who wants to buy the new car, then because of the internet he has to pay a higher price for the car

  9. Supply of goods • If the supply of goods is fixed (say, paintings by Rembrandt), an increase in transparency raises the number of buyers per seller and hence raises the market power of sellers => price increases and consumer surplus goes down. • If goods are supplied with CRS technology, an increase in transparency only has a competition effect and hence leads to more output and lower prices => consumer surplus goes up

  10. Model • Consumers have a taste for variety • There are n firms selling goods • A fraction  of consumers know of all firms and buy from all firms (taste for variety) • A fraction (1-) of consumers knows only one firm and buys from that firm • An increase in transparency is modeled as an increase in .

  11. Model • For given output levels of firms, an increase in  increases prices by the demand effect • However, in Cournot and Bertrand equilibrium the rise in  also has a competition effect raising output • Assuming that production features 'strong enough' decreasing returns to scale the demand effect outweighs the competition effect and hence prices go up

  12. Consumer welfare • Let uI() denote the utility of informed consumers and • uU() denote the utility of uninformed consumers • Then uI() > uU() and • uI() and uU() are decreasing in  if the demand effect outweighs the competition effect • Consumer welfare is defined as W =  * uI() + (1- ) * uU() • If the demand effect is strong enough W goes down as  goes up

  13. Endogenous transparency  • If customers decide themselves on how much to search, they take aggregate  as given, so they maximize • i * uI() + (1- i) * uU() – c(i) • Hence they overlook the negative externality on others if uI() and uU() are decreasing in  • market overinvests in search compared to social planner maximizing consumer surplus • Hence starting from the private outcome, further stimulating transparency may reduce consumer surplus

  14. Price dispersion • If more transparency leads to lower prices, it may raise price dispersion • Reason is that there are two business strategies for firms: • compete on price in the transparent market • charge high price to stranded consumers • As transparency goes up, price goes down with former strategy while it remains unchanged with latter strategy => • price dispersion goes up

  15. Conclusion • In the cases where more transparency leads to a demand effect and where firms produce with decreasing returns to scale • an increase in transparency leads to • higher prices • lower consumer surplus • If more transparency leads to lower prices, it may raise price dispersion

More Related