Equilibrium in Style: A Modeling Framework on the Cash Flow and the Life Cycle of a Consumer Store
The consumer store is ubiquitous and plays an important role in our everyday lives. It is an open question why stores usually have such short life cycles (typically around 3 years in China). This paper proposes a theoretical framework based on an equilibrium in style supply of stores and style deman...
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Zusammenfassung: | The consumer store is ubiquitous and plays an important role in our everyday
lives. It is an open question why stores usually have such short life cycles
(typically around 3 years in China). This paper proposes a theoretical
framework based on an equilibrium in style supply of stores and style demand of
consumers to characterize store cash flow (revenue), leading to a strong
explanation of this puzzle. In our model, we derive that the preference
shifting of consumers is the main reason for the cash flow decreasing to its
break-even line over time, while the visibility broadening leads to initial
growth, resulting in rainbow-shaped cash flow and its life cycle. Moreover, the
intensified spatial competition will lead to an unexpected decrease in the
store's cash flow, or even closure. We calibrate our model with proprietary
data of three Chinese stores from three representative industries and study the
relationship between customers' preference shifting and cash flow. To our
knowledge, there have been no prior attempts to quantitatively model the life
cycle of the store. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2404.02426 |