Author List: Ghose, Anindya; Smith, Michael D.; Telang, Rahul;
Information Systems Research, 2006, Volume 17, Issue 1, Page 3/19/2017.
Information systems and the Internet have facilitated the creation of used-product markets that feature a dramatically wider selection, lower search costs, and lower prices than their brick-and-mortar counterparts do. The increased viability of these used-product markets has caused concern among content creators and distributors, notably the Association of American Publishers and Author's Guild, who believe that used-product markets will significantly cannibalize new product sales.This proposition, while theoretically possible, is based on speculation as opposed to empirical evidence. In this paper, we empirically analyze the degree to which used products cannibalize new-product sales for books'one of the most prominent used-product categories sold online. To do this, we use a unique data set collected from Amazon.com's new and used book marketplaces to measure the degree to which used products cannibalize new-product sales. We then use these estimates to measure the resulting first-order changes in publisher welfare and consumer surplus.Our analysis suggests that used books are poor substitutes for new books for most of Amazon's customers.The cross-price elasticity of new-book demand with respect to used-book prices is only 0.088. As a result, only16% of used-book sales at Amazon cannibalize new-book purchases. The remaining 84% of used-book sales apparently would not have occurred at Amazon's new-book prices. Further, our estimates suggest that this increase in book readership from Amazon's used-book marketplace increases consumer surplus by approximately $67.21 million annually. This increase in consumer surplus, together with an estimated $45.05 million loss in publisher welfare and a $65.76 million increase in Amazon's profits, leads to an increase in total welfare to society of approximately $87.92 million annually from the introduction of used-book markets at Amazon.com.
Keywords: Consumer Surplus; Electronic Markets; Price Competition; publisher welfare; retailer welfare; used-book sales
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#182 0.320 percent sales average economic growth increasing total using number million percentage evidence analyze approximately does business flow annual book daily
#84 0.201 electronic markets commerce market new efficiency suppliers internet changes marketplace analysis suggests b2b marketplaces industry examine easy product making physical
#5 0.177 consumer consumers model optimal welfare price market pricing equilibrium surplus different higher results strategy quality cost lower competition firm paper
#262 0.153 impact data effect set propensity potential unique increase matching use selection score results self-selection heterogeneity evidence measure associated estimate leads
#199 0.056 reviews product online review products wom consumers consumer ratings sales word-of-mouth impact reviewers word using effect marketing helpfulness electronic commerce
#41 0.050 price prices dispersion spot buying good transaction forward retailers commodity pricing collected premium customers using posted relatively obtain listing uncertainty