2006
DOI: 10.1093/joclec/nhl018
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Substituting Complements

Abstract: The presence of multiple sellers in the provision of (non-substitutable) complementary goods leads to outcomes that are worse than those generated by a monopoly (with a vertically integrated production of complements), a problem known in the economic literature as complementary oligopoly and recently popularized in the legal literature as the tragedy of the anticommons. We ask the following question: how many substitutes for each complement are necessary to render the presence of multiple sellers preferable to… Show more

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Cited by 23 publications
(15 citation statements)
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References 24 publications
(19 reference statements)
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“…Along the way, we will verify how the assumption of imperfect substitutability changes the impact of n on the extent of the tragedy of the anticommons when compared to the case studied by Dari‐Mattiacci and Parisi ()…”
Section: Competition and Welfare When Sector A Is A Monopolymentioning
confidence: 92%
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“…Along the way, we will verify how the assumption of imperfect substitutability changes the impact of n on the extent of the tragedy of the anticommons when compared to the case studied by Dari‐Mattiacci and Parisi ()…”
Section: Competition and Welfare When Sector A Is A Monopolymentioning
confidence: 92%
“…As for welfare comparisons, we notice first from that, with a common quality value, no matter the extent of competition in sector B (i.e., no matter n ), ‘separating’ the two components of the system produced by an integrated monopolist and having them sold by two independent firms, always leads to higher prices. This clearly indicates that, when goods are not perfect substitutes, the tragedy of the anticommons is never solved by introducing competition in sector B , contrarily to what happens with perfect substitutes (Dari‐Mattiacci and Parisi, ) . In order to confirm such prediction, we now compare consumer surplus when sector B is an oligopoly with the one enjoyed under an integrated monopoly, establishing the following result…”
Section: Competition and Welfare When Sector A Is A Monopolymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…the corresponding decrease in demand for the composite good D S ), will internalize the negative pricing externality exerted by individual producers and therefore set a lower, profit-maximizing bundle price (see e.g. Dari-Mattiacci and Parisi, 2006). As such, this is the horizontal equivalent of vertical integration to avoid the problem of double marginalization (Spengler, 1950).…”
Section: One-sided Bundles: Complementary Monopolymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although the pricing of complements has been studied theoretically in various settings, there are few empirical analyses in the economic literature. Examples of theoretical treatments include Economides and Salop (), Economides (), Davis and Murphy (), Choi (), Dari‐Mattiacci and Parisi (), and Yan and Bandyopadhyay ().…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%