2020
DOI: 10.1111/1756-2171.12304
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Dynamic competition with network externalities: how history matters

Abstract: We consider dynamic competition among platforms in a market with network externalities. A platform that dominated the market in the previous period becomes “focal” in the current period, in that agents play the equilibrium in which they join the focal platform whenever such equilibrium exists. Yet when faced with higher‐quality competition, can a low‐quality platform remain focal? In the finite‐horizon case, the unique equilibrium is efficient for “patient” platforms; with an infinite time horizon, however, th… Show more

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Cited by 63 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…Such pessimistic beliefs for the entrant are a standard manner to formalize path dependence favoring incumbents in a static model with network e ects (see for example the in uential paper by Caillaud and Jullien, 2003). e promising developments by Biglaiser and Crémer (2016) and Halaburda et al (2016) provide truly dynamic models with a similar avor. It is worth noting that rms in our se ing are assumed to be symmetric except for two aspects.…”
Section: E Baseline Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such pessimistic beliefs for the entrant are a standard manner to formalize path dependence favoring incumbents in a static model with network e ects (see for example the in uential paper by Caillaud and Jullien, 2003). e promising developments by Biglaiser and Crémer (2016) and Halaburda et al (2016) provide truly dynamic models with a similar avor. It is worth noting that rms in our se ing are assumed to be symmetric except for two aspects.…”
Section: E Baseline Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is true that in praxis, some technological platforms have created monopolies that are hard to manage, so it can be inferred that public policies have not yet achieved the objective of avoiding these monopolies. This topic has become of high interest to the society in 2020 [ 58 , 59 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Second, some platform markets tend to exhibit a “winner‐take‐all” feature so that there is competition for the market but little competition on the market. Competition in this context is then shaped by history dependence (Arthur, ), incumbency advantage (Biglaiser & Crémer, ; Biglaiser, Crémer, & Dobos, ) and consumers’ expectations (Jullien & Pavan, ; Halaburda et al, ). In this context, a static view of mergers between platforms may be misleading either by overemphasizing current strong market position in a dynamically competitive environment or by underestimating the effect of a merger between future potential competitors.…”
Section: Conclusion and Future Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%