Failing to Choose the Best Price: Theory, Evidence, and Policy

Both the "law of one price" and Bertrand's (J Savants 67:499-508, 1883) prediction of marginal cost pricing for homogeneous goods rest on the assumption that consumers will choose the best price. In practice, consumers often fail to choose the best price because they search too little...

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Veröffentlicht in:Review of industrial organization 2015-11, Vol.47 (3), p.303-340
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description Both the "law of one price" and Bertrand's (J Savants 67:499-508, 1883) prediction of marginal cost pricing for homogeneous goods rest on the assumption that consumers will choose the best price. In practice, consumers often fail to choose the best price because they search too little, become confused comparing prices, and/or show excessive inertia through too little switching away from past choices or default options. This is particularly true when price is a vector rather than a scalar, and consumers have limited experience in the relevant market. All three mistakes may contribute to positive markups that fail to diminish as the number of competing sellers increases. Firms may have an incentive to exacerbate these problems by obfuscating prices, thereby using complexity to make price comparisons difficult and soften competition. Possible regulatory interventions include: simplifying the choice environment, for instance by restricting price to be a scalar; advising consumers of their expected costs under each option; or choosing on behalf of consumers.
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source PAIS Index; Business Source Complete; JSTOR; SpringerLink Journals - AutoHoldings
subjects Competition
Consumer behavior
Consumers
Costs
Economic theory
Economics
Economics and Finance
Equilibrium
Industrial Organization
Inertia
Investors
Microeconomics
Mortgage brokers
Noise
Prices
Regulation
Social security
Studies
title Failing to Choose the Best Price: Theory, Evidence, and Policy
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