Too Much or Too Little? Price-Discrimination in a Market for Credence Goods
Abstract
This article studies second-degree price-discrimination in markets for credence goods. Such markets are affected by asymmetric information because expert sellers are better informed than their customers about the quality that yields the highest surplus from trade. We show that discrimination regards the amount of advice offered to customers and that it leads to a different equilibrium distortion depending on the main source of heterogeneity among consumers. If consumers differ mainly in the expected cost needed to generate consumer surplus, the inefficiency occurring at the bottom of the type distribution involves overprovision of quality. By contrast, if consumers differ in the surplus
generated whenever the consumer’s needs are met, the inefficiency involves underprovision of quality.
Other description
JEL: L15, D82, D40
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2014-01Author
Dulleck, Uwe
Kerschbamer, Rudolf
Konovalov, Alexander
Keywords
Price Discrimination
Credence Goods
Experts
Discounters
Distribution Channels
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
582
Language
eng