Do Firms' Product Lines Include Too Many Varieties?
A firm that offers an additional product can capture business from rival firms for other products when consumers prefer to concentrate their purchases at a single supplier. This may lead firms to offer excessive product variety from the social standpoint. A firm may even completely foreclose competing firms from the market by introducing a new product. Forbidding new product introductions (e.g., forbidding universal banking or forbidding a new airline route), forbidding mergers that broaden firms' product lines (as, e.g., the EC forbade a merger of commuter aircraft manufacturers), and forbidding Sunday shopping may sometimes be appropriate public policies.
Year of publication: |
1997
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Authors: | Klemperer, Paul ; Padilla, A. Jorge |
Published in: |
RAND Journal of Economics. - The RAND Corporation, ISSN 0741-6261. - Vol. 28.1997, 3, p. 472-488
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Publisher: |
The RAND Corporation |
Saved in:
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