Title: Assessing the anticompetitive effects of multiproduct pricing
1- Assessing the anticompetitive effects of
multiproduct pricing - Dennis Carlton, Patrick Greenlee, Michael Waldman
- April 2008
- The views contained herein are my own, and do not
necessarily reflect the views of the U.S.
Department of Justice.
2Outline
- Review rationales and effects for linked
pricing (bundling, tying, loyalty discounts) - Discuss discount allocation approach for bundled
loyalty discounts - Present alternative approach for looking at
linked pricing -
3Rationale 1 Efficiencies in production or
selling, improved product mix
- Economies of scope
- active ingredients in cold medicine
- optional equipment for automobiles
- Preservation of quality
- Specify inputs to maintain proper function, and
reputation - Improved product mix in variable proportions
settings - durable goods and maintenance
4Rationale 2 Price discrimination
- Metering
- Durable goods and consumables
- Printers and toner cartridges
- Reducing variance of demand
- Uniform price extracts larger fraction of surplus
- Block booking of movies
- Sorting customers
- Set different prices for different bundles
- Outbound and return air flights
5Rationale 3 Increase product differentiation
- Tying a homogenous product (B) to a monopoly
product (A) creates product differentiation - Consumers that like A will purchase AB from
monopolist. - Consumers that do not like A will purchase B from
rival firm. - Tie/bundle allows monopolist to commit not to
compete aggressively in B for customers that do
not like A.
6Rationale 4 Monopolize tied good market
- One monopoly rent critique
- For two goods (A, B) used in fixed proportions,
an A-monopolist cannot profitably create a
B-monopoly via tying. - Reason it can fail
- If B has uses other than with A, and there are
scale economies with B, then tying can profitably
exclude rivals from the B market.
7Rationale 5 Maintain tying good monopoly
- Assume the two goods are complements.
- Eliminate inferior version of tying good
- Tying denies scale to all rival sellers of tied
good. - This causes rival seller of tying good to exit.
- Defeat later entry into tying good
- Tying denies scale in tied good, so no entry.
- Given this, would-be entrant does not enter tying
good market because it cannot cover fixed costs. - Raise rivals costs
- Tied good is essential complement
- Durable goods and their maintenance
8Rationales 4 and 5 Exclusion
- These stories include economies of scale/scope
for the entrant - manufacturing (including fixed entry costs)
- switching costs in dynamic settings
- Absent such effect, denying sales to a rival firm
does not alter the rivals effectiveness - Suggests presence of scale/scope economies for
entrant is a necessary element for such theories.
9Rationales 4 and 5 Exclusion
- What about scope economies for the dominant firm?
- Should encourage scope economies across goods
(Rationale 1). - Are scope economies attainable without tie?
- Balance harms and benefits?
10Bundled Loyalty Discounts
- Pricing scheme that includes tying as a special
case - Buyer that is X loyal in B gets a discount on
each purchased unit of A. - If X 100 and the undiscounted price for A
exceeds the choke price, then the discount is
economically equivalent to tying - A is tying good, B is tied good
- Consumer gets A only if she buys B exclusively
from the firm selling A
11Antitrust Modernization Commission Report
- Proposes the following approach
- Allocate discounts for bundle to the competitive
product and check whether dominant firm sold
competitive product below incremental cost - Show that the dominant firm likely can recoup
these short-term losses - Show that the bundled loyalty discount program
adversely affects competition
12Example
- B competitively supplied pB cB 5
- Monopolist
- charges pA 12
- loyalty program (pA 10, pB 6)
- (consumer that buys B only from monopolist gets
discount of 2 on A) - Applying the AMC test
- Total cost of B cB discount on A 5 2 7
- Price of B pB 6
- Since cost exceeds price, firm fails test.
- Why offer a discount of 2 on A and receive only a
premium of 1 on B?
13Comments on AMC Approach - 1
- 1. This is a predation test
- Does cost of incremental volume exceed price?
- What is the proper increment?
- With discontinuous pricing, can often find an
increment that is sold at a negative price.
- 2. Can construct examples where firm flunks test,
yet surplus increases (and vice versa) - Price discrimination
- Should not be a test, maybe a safe harbor
14Comments on AMC Approach - 2
- 3. Recoupment requirement makes no sense (or is
vacuous) - Loyalty discounts do not require profit sacrifice
- 4. How does one show that competition has been
adversely affected?
15An Alternative Approach - 1
- Required elements
- Scale economies in tied good (B)
- Market power in tying good (A)
- Does the price of B increase for consumers that
do not buy A? - Is the rival firm still in the market? Has its
marginal cost increased?
16An Alternative Approach - 2
- Offsetting efficiencies
- Are there scale/scope economies from tying?
- Are they not attainable in another fashion?
tough question
17Apply to LePages
- LePages claimed scale economies are important,
but offered no evidence. - 3M has market power in transparent tape.
- LePages offered no clear evidence about
increased prices for tape. - LePages purchased by another firm (Conros),
still selling tape.