HOW DOES INCOMPATIBILITY AFFECT PRICES?: EVIDENCE FROM ATM'S <link rid="fn42">-super-* </link>
If consumers value 'mix and match' combinations of network complements, incompatibility between different sellers' components should affect prices. In ATM markets, a 1996 governance change exogenously generated such incompatibility, by allowing banks to impose surcharges when other banks' deposit customers use their ATM's. In our data, incompatibility makes the relationship between deposit account pricing and own ATM's more positive, and makes the relationship between deposit account pricing and competitors ATM's more negative. The level effect on prices is positive. The pattern of results is more pronounced in high population density markets, where customers may care more about ATM's. Copyright 2009 The Authors. Journal compilation 2009 Blackwell Publishing Ltd. and the Editorial Board of The Journal of Industrial Economics.
Year of publication: |
2009
|
---|---|
Authors: | KNITTEL, CHRISTOPHER R. ; STANGO, VICTOR |
Published in: |
Journal of Industrial Economics. - Wiley Blackwell. - Vol. 57.2009, 3, p. 557-582
|
Publisher: |
Wiley Blackwell |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Incompatibility, Product Attributes and Consumer Welfare: Evidence from ATMs
Knittel, Christopher R., (2004)
-
Incompatibility, product attributes and consumer welfare: evidence from ATMs
Knittel, Christopher R., (2005)
-
Compatibility and pricing with indirect network effects: evidence from ATMs
Knittel, Christopher R., (2005)
- More ...