Title: Environmental Externality and Horizontal Product Differentiation
1Environmental Externality and Horizontal Product
Differentiation
- George Deltas
- Madhu Khanna
- Donna Theresa Ramirez
- program in Environmental and Resource Economics
- University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- 23 September 2004
2Consumption of green goods
- Consumers have preferences for green products
Gallup study - 57 of Americans avoid environmentally harmful
products - 65 of Americans willing to pay a premium for
eco-safe products - Willingness to pay for greener commodities may be
due to - private benefits - cost savings
- social benefits - lower pollution
- However, consumers do not seem to fully
internalize the externality when making
consumption choices - low-efficiency cars
- non-recyclable containers
3Preference for other attributes
- Consumers also have preferences for other product
attributes - other attributes that define quality intrinsic
product quality - reliability, durability
- overall performance
- brand and the attributes that define the brand
for which ranking across consumers may not be
uniform - style
- design
- There may be some trade-offs in choosing
horizontal and vertical attributes - Size of cars and fuel efficiency
- Convenience of gas station location and brand
loyalty
4Firm response
- Firms respond to such consumer preferences by
differentiating each other according to brand,
intrinsic quality, and greeness - The extent to which firms increase the greeness
of a product depend on - consumer valuation for green goods
- substitutability between green and ordinary goods
- inherent product quality
- how its rival responds
- reduce price
- market greener products
5Evidence of firm response to green preferences
- Toyota
- manufacture high fuel efficiency vehicles
- manufacture hybrid vehicles
- McDonalds
- use paper/cardboard instead of styrofoam
- Procter and Gamble
- use recyclable and refillable packaging for
detergents - IBM
- inform consumers of proper disposal of hardware
6Objectives
- To determine which types of firms would choose to
manufacture greener products - To determine whether market pressure in the form
of consumer preferences for environmental
attributes is sufficient to achieve socially
optimal level of environmental quality - If not, what types of instruments can achieve
social optimum - To assess the welfare impacts of these instruments
7General Framework
- Extension of the standard Hotelling model of
horizontal differentiation - recognize that products are both vertically and
horizontally differentiated - greeness is only one of the many attributes
consumers care about - firms can choose greeness of products, while
other attributes are constant - firms compete for consumers in prices
- consumers choose products that give them highest
net utility
8Differences with current literature
- Differs from vertical product differentiation
(VPD) models in the following ways - valuation or MWTP for quality that is uniform
across consumers - differentiates between private and social
valuation for product quality - recognizes preference for brand
- Differs from horizontal product differentiation
(HPD) models in the following ways - takes extent of horizontal differentiation as
fixed - asymmetric firms firms do not just vary
according to brand but also according to
intrinsic quality
9The Model Consumer preferences
- The utility function of a representative consumer
i, consuming a good produced by firm jA,B is - where
- Vj is utility from product js intrinsic quality,
VA VB - Sj is greeness of the product
- pj is price
- dij is consumer i s distance from most preferred
brand, by purchasing product j - q is extent of brand loyalty
- l is private valuation for environmental quality,
less than lS - lS is social valuation for environmental quality
10The indifferent consumer
- The consumer indifferent between buying from A
and from B , xc is the one who equates - The indifferent consumer is
- So that firm market shares are
11The Model Firm competition
- Firms compete in 2 stages
- Stage 1 Choose environmental quality
- Stage 2 Choose prices
- to maximize profits
- where qj is defined by consumer preferences
- Quadratic cost of environmental quality
improvement, marginal cost of quality same across
both firms, zero production costs
12Who undertakes higher environmental quality
investment?
- The firm with higher intrinsic quality undertake
higher environmental quality investment - The firm with higher intrinsic quality has higher
market share and charges higher prices - The firm with higher intrinsic quality earns
higher profit
13Features of the Nash solution
- The higher the intrinsic quality differential,
the higher the differential in quality, price,
market share and profits - The higher the private valuation for
environmental quality, the greater the difference
in environmental quality levels, prices and
market shares - The higher the extent of brand loyalty, the less
the advantage of the high quality firm in terms
of - environmental quality
- market share
14Social Welfare
- Consumer surplus from purchasing good from firm A
- Consumer surplus from purchasing good from firm B
- Total cost of investing in environmental quality
-
- Transportation cost
15Is Nash solution welfare-maximizing?
- The firm with higher intrinsic quality has higher
welfare maximizing level of S than the low
quality rival - If firms are asymmetric,
- the intrinsically high quality firm always
underinvests in environmental quality relative to
welfare maximizing level - the intrinsically low quality firm
- overinvests in environmental quality if the
inherent quality differential is high - underinvests in environmental quality if the
inherent quality differential is low - If firms are symmetric, even if consumers fully
internalize the externality, Nash choices will
always be sub-optimal
16What instrument can achieve welfare-maximizing
environmental quality level?
- Profit function with a differentiated subsidy is
- The subsidy for the high quality firm is higher
than the subsidy level for the low quality firm - The subsidy differential
- increases with the social valuation for
environmental quality and the inherent quality
differential - falls with the extent of brand loyalty
17How will a uniform environmental quality subsidy
perform?
- Profit function with a uniform subsidy is
- A uniform subsidy causes both firms to choose
quality levels higher than their Nash choices - The uniform subsidy is lower (higher) than the
optimal differentiated subsidy for the high (low)
quality firm - Causing the high (low) quality firm to under
(over) invest than is welfare-maximizing
18What about a MQS?
- We model a welfare-maximizing MQS that binds for
the low quality firm - that satisfies
- We find that the high quality firms choice of
environmental quality FALLS with the level of MQS
19Illustrating the MQS
20How will MQS perform relative to welfare
maximizing levels?
- If intrinsic quality differential is
- higher than some low critical value
- lower than some maximum value
- Then
- the high quality firm chooses S level that
exceeds the MQS - MQS will be above (below) the socially optimal
choice of the low (high) quality firm
21Are these instruments welfare enhancing relative
to Nash?
- A uniform subsidy is welfare-enhancing if
marginal benefit from environmental quality
improvement is higher than marginal cost for both
firms - Marginal benefit is higher if the social value
for environmental quality, lS is high, and - Marginal cost falls if K is low, r is low, and if
degree of brand loyalty is low, i.e., low q, - A MQS is welfare-improving if
- Brand loyalty is strong and
- Positive net revenue effect on the low quality
firm offsets the negative net revenue effect on
the high quality firm
22Conclusions
- Market leaders tend to be the environmental
leaders. - Consumer pressure is not sufficient for firms to
choose the socially optimal level of
environmental quality even if consumers fully
internalize the positive externality. - A differentiated subsidy which is higher for the
intrinsically high quality firm is sufficient to
achieve welfare-maximizing levels. - A uniform subsidy will make the high (low)
quality firm under(over) invest on environmental
quality investment relative to social optimum. - The high quality firm responds negatively to an
increase in a minimum quality standard. - The extent of brand loyalty has a significant
role in determining whether uniform subsidy and
the MQS are welfare-enhancing.
23What can the results say about some
goods/industries in the real world?
- 1. Market leaders tend to be environmental
leaders - Automobile manufacturing industry
- Toyota has always been ranked highly in ratings
by JD Power Associates, and by consumers - Toyota has higher mpg than corresponding cars in
the rivals fleet - Toyota has been leading in developments for
hybrid vehicles, rivals - Petroleum manufacturing
- BP Amoco is an industry leader
- BP Amoco led its rivals in in advancements in use
of cleaner alternative fuels such as natural gas
and in supporting the Kyoto Protocol - Personal consumer goods
- Procter and Gamble is the industry leader
- Procter and Gamble paved the way for developing
more environmental-friendly packaging
24Examples(contd)
- 2. Subsidy on hybrid vehicles
- There is a 2,000 tax break for those who
purchase hybrid vehicles - this is like a uniform
subsidy - Those already producing hybrid vehicles such as
Toyota and Honda (assumed to be high V firms),
are selling them below their unit cost - While for the low V firms such as GM and Ford,
they have delayed manufacture of hybrid vehicles
until 2005 and 2007, respectively. - These imply that the 2000 subsidy is not enough
for the high quality firm to encourage consumers
to buy hybrid vehicles if sold at true cost,
while at the same time, too low for the low
quality firms to start manufacturing them
25Examples(contd)
- 3. MQS Is the CAFÉ standard a good example of
such an MQS? - Tightening of current CAFÉ standards are under
deliberations (Source Greenwire February 2003) - Opposed by Ford and GM
- Supported by Toyota and Honda (proposed standards
are not stringent enough) - This might be an indication that the proposed MQS
is - higher than what Ford and GM would privately
choose to remain profitable - lower than what Toyota and Honda would privately
choose - If consumers are loyal to their brands (assuming
MBMC for all firms), then the proposed MQS will
be welfare-improving - those loyal to GM and Ford will experience higher
environmental quality - those loyal to Toyota and Honda will keep on
consuming cars cleaner than the other consumers