Article ID: | iaor1995195 |
Country: | United States |
Volume: | 27 |
Issue: | 1 |
Start Page Number: | 62 |
End Page Number: | 72 |
Publication Date: | Feb 1993 |
Journal: | Transportation Science |
Authors: | Perrot Anne |
This paper is a selective survey of the economic literature on the functioning of the markets where goods are subject to network externalities. Telecommunications, transport and computers give examples of markets where, for various reasons, these network effects appear. The paper first examines how the consumer’s choices are affected by these network effects, as they are when switching costs are at work. On the markets of network goods, consumer’s decisions depend either on the choices of previous generations, or on consumer’s expectations, or both. The results are that choices may exhibit inefficiencies: a ‘wrong’ good may be adopted because of the lack of coordination between individual decisions. The paper then turns to the study of a firm’s strategies: when firms produce network goods, they may choose to make their product compatible or incompatible with the rival’s good. Moreover, the nature of price competition is affected by the compatibility regime that prevails. This explains why consumers, who would always choose compatibility if prices were constant, might in fact prefer incompatibility if this regime intensifies price competition. In conclusion, compatibility choices by the firms and welfare implictions are briefly examined.