Title: Chapter 11 The information economy
1Chapter 11The information economy
- David Begg, Stanley Fischer and Rudiger
Dornbusch, Economics, - 6th Edition, McGraw-Hill, 2000
- Power Point presentation by Peter Smith
2e-Economics
The information revolution is here
but economics still provides a reliable
framework to understand what is happening..
This is microeconomics in action
3Use of the internet
4e-products
- An e-product
- can be digitally encoded then transmitted
rapidly, accurately and cheaply - e.g. music, films, books, sport
- Fixed costs of producing e-products are huge
- but marginal costs of distribution are tiny
- implying vast economies of scale
5Consuming information
Four key features of e-products
- experience
- overload
- switching costs
- network externalities
6Experience products
- An experience good or service is one that must be
sampled before the user knows its value - information is nearly always new
- marketing needs careful attention
- free samples
- previews
- establishing reputation
7Information overload
- arises when the volume of available information
is large - but the cost of processing it is high
- screening devices become crucial
8Switching costs
- arise when existing costs are sunk
- so changing supplier incurs additional costs
- smart suppliers devise strategies for locking in
their customers - e.g. air miles, supermarket reward cards
9Network externalities
Suppose D1 represents the demand curve for a
product exhibiting network externalities
With price at P1, demand is limited.
If price is reduced to P2, more people find the
network attractive so not only is there a move
along the demand curve, but there is a shift in
demand.
P2
Long-run demand is more elastic (DD).
10Information the supply side
- Given substantial economies of scale, we expect
monopoly suppliers of information products - Dominant firm with competitive fringe
- e.g. Microsoft
- Niche market monopolies
11Pricing information products
- Strategies for pricing information products
- two-part tariff
- an annual charge to cover fixed costs, and a
small price per unit related to marginal costs - versioning
- the deliberate creation of different qualities to
facilitate price discrimination - bundling
- the joint supply of more than one product to
reduce the need for price discrimination
12Competition vs. collaboration
- A strategic alliance is a blend of co-operation
and competition, in which a group of suppliers
provide a range of products that partly
complement one another - e.g. Microsoft and Intel
- airline alliances One World, Star
13Understanding the e-economy
- 1 The information revolution is changing our
lives - but few of its activities or market tactics are
unprecedented - 2 The revolution in technology has not required
a corresponding revolution in economic theory