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The impact of bargaining on markets with price takers: too many bargainers spoil the broth.

The impact of bargaining on markets with price takers: too many bargainers spoil the broth.
The impact of bargaining on markets with price takers: too many bargainers spoil the broth.
In this paper we study how bargainers impact on markets in which firms set a list price to sell to those consumers who take prices as given. The list price acts as an outside option for the bargainers, so the higher the list price, the more the firms can extract from bargainers. We find that an increase in the proportion of consumers seeking to bargain can lower consumer surplus overall, even though new bargainers receive a lower price.

The reason is that the list price for those who do not bargain and the bargained prices for those who were already bargaining rise: sellers have a greater incentive to make the bargainers’ outside option less attractive, reducing the incentive to compete for price takers. Competition Authority exhortations to bargain can therefore be misplaced. We also consider the implications for optimal seller bargaining.
0014-2921
658-674
Gill, David
2319117f-b14e-48c6-8a33-34f5c9d4e2ea
Thanassoulis, J.
4cb773a0-3dca-4d7c-b800-ee32729a1457
Gill, David
2319117f-b14e-48c6-8a33-34f5c9d4e2ea
Thanassoulis, J.
4cb773a0-3dca-4d7c-b800-ee32729a1457

Gill, David and Thanassoulis, J. (2009) The impact of bargaining on markets with price takers: too many bargainers spoil the broth. European Economic Review, 53 (6), 658-674. (doi:10.1016/j.euroecorev.2008.10.004).

Record type: Article

Abstract

In this paper we study how bargainers impact on markets in which firms set a list price to sell to those consumers who take prices as given. The list price acts as an outside option for the bargainers, so the higher the list price, the more the firms can extract from bargainers. We find that an increase in the proportion of consumers seeking to bargain can lower consumer surplus overall, even though new bargainers receive a lower price.

The reason is that the list price for those who do not bargain and the bargained prices for those who were already bargaining rise: sellers have a greater incentive to make the bargainers’ outside option less attractive, reducing the incentive to compete for price takers. Competition Authority exhortations to bargain can therefore be misplaced. We also consider the implications for optimal seller bargaining.

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Published date: August 2009

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Local EPrints ID: 150151
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/150151
ISSN: 0014-2921
PURE UUID: 65bd2a76-d04a-4d26-ace5-a8a59d3e4672

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Date deposited: 04 May 2010 13:33
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 01:12

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Author: David Gill
Author: J. Thanassoulis

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