Inter-firm price coordination in a two-sided market
Working paper
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Date
2014-05Metadata
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- Discussion papers (SAM) [663]
Abstract
In many two-sided markets we observe that there is a common distributor on one side of the market. One example is the TV industry, where TV channels choose
advertising prices to maximize own profit and typically delegate determination of viewer prices to
independent distributors. We show that in such a market structure the stronger the competition
between the TV channels, the greater will joint profits in the TV industry be. We also show
that joint profits might be higher if the wholesale contract between each TV channel and the
distributor consists of a simple fixed fee rather than a two-part
tariff.