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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Competition with targeted product design: Price, variety, and welfare

Lluís M. GraneroMiguel González-maestre

subject

Economics and EconometricsProduct designTechnological changeStrategy and Managementmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesEconomics Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)Market sizeContext (language use)Variety (cybernetics)OligopolyMicroeconomicsCompetition (economics)0502 economics and businessIndustrial relationsEconomics050211 marketing050207 economicsSet (psychology)Welfarehealth care economics and organizationsIndustrial organizationmedia_common

description

Abstract We consider the price and welfare effects of competition in targeted product design, in the context of the Salop circle model. Changes in product design lead to demand rotations that set the stage for our analysis. With an exogenous number of firms, we show that the degree of targeted product design tends to increase with the number of firms. Moreover, under reasonable conditions, price-increasing competition takes place, for intermediate levels of the number of firms. This effect is associated with the possibility of lower consumer welfare. With endogenous firm entry, an interesting insight from our analysis is that in some situations an increase in market size or a technological progress that reduces entry costs both might reduce consumers’ welfare.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijindorg.2018.02.009