eScholarship Repository eScholarship Repository California Digital Library
eScholarship > IBER > CPC > Paper CPC05-050

CPC Papers

CPC Website

Policies

Search CPC

Submit a Paper

Notify me of new papers

institute_logo

Institute of Business and Economic Research
Competition Policy Center
University of California, Berkeley

CPC Papers  •  CPC Website  •  Policies  •  Search  •  Submit a Paper

Estimating Firm-Level Demand at a Price Comparison Site: Accounting for Shoppers and the Number of Competitors
Michael Baye, Indiana University
RUPERT J. GATTI, University of Cambridge
Paul Kattuman, University of Cambridge
John Morgan, University of California, Berkeley

Download the Paper (356 K, PDF file) - December 1, 2004 Tell a colleague about it.
Printing Tips: Select 'print as image' in the Acrobat print dialog if you have trouble printing.

ABSTRACT:
Clearinghouse models of online pricing---such as Varian (1980), Rosenthal (1980), Narasimhan (1988), and Baye-Morgan (2001)---view a price comparison site as an "information clearinghouse" where shoppers and loyals obtain price and product information to make online purchases. These models predict that the responsiveness of a firm's demand to a change in its price depends on the number of sellers and whether the price change results in the firm charging the lowest price in the market. Using a unique firm-level dataset from Kelkoo.com (Yahoo!'s European price comparison site), we examine these predictions by providing estimates of the demand for PDAs. Our results indicate that the number of competing sellers and both the firm's location on the screen and relative ranking in the list of prices are important determinants of an online retailer's demand. We find that an online monopolist faces an elasticity of demand of about -2, while sellers competing against 10 other sellers face an elasticity of about -6. We also find empirical evidence of a discontinuous jump in a firm's demand as its price declines from the second-lowest to the lowest price. Our estimates suggest that about 13% of the consumers at Kelkoo are "shoppers" who purchase from the seller offering the lowest price.

SUGGESTED CITATION:
Michael Baye, RUPERT J. GATTI, Paul Kattuman, and John Morgan, "Estimating Firm-Level Demand at a Price Comparison Site: Accounting for Shoppers and the Number of Competitors" (December 1, 2004). Competition Policy Center. Paper CPC05-050.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/iber/cpc/CPC05-050

 
bar
Open Archives Initiative eScholarship is a service of the California Digital Library bepress