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http://hdl.handle.net/2451/29470
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| Title: | Network Externalities, Mutuality, and Compatibility |
| Authors: | Nagler, Matthew G. - The City College of New York |
| Issue Date: | 2008 |
| Series/Report no.: | Net Institute Working Paper;08-37 |
| Abstract: | Positive network externalities can arise when consumers benefit from the
consumption of compatible products by other consumers (user-positive
consumption externalities) or, alternatively, when they incur costs
from the consumption of incompatible products by other consumers
(nonuser-negative consumption externalities). But whereas user-positive
externalities are typically mutually imposed and imply mutual benefit
because they relate to interoperability, with nonuser-negative
externalities the costs of incompatibility may be imposed unilaterally
and borne asymmetrically. For example, increased risks of death and
injury on the roads due to the co-existence of large and small vehicles
are imposed exclusively by the owners of the large vehicles and borne
exclusively by the occupants of the small vehicles. This paper compares
the social optimality of incentives for compatibility under regimes
involving user-positive and nonuser-negative externalities. Earlier
work with respect to user-positive externalities (e.g., Katz and
Shapiro, 1985) suggests that firms with relatively small networks or
weak reputations tend to be biased in favor of compatibility, while
individual firms’ incentives for compatibility are suboptimal
when their networks are closely matched in size. Meanwhile, intuition
suggests that with nonuser-negative externalities incentives for
incompatibility should always be excessive, reflecting the notion that
activities involving unilaterally imposed negative externalities will
always be overprovided by the market (in the absence of regulation or
Coaseian mitigation). Using a "location" model of
differentiated products, we find that, under both regimes, incentives
for compatibility tend to be suboptimal when firms' networks are close
in size, and excessive for the small firm when the networks differ
greatly in size. Surprising public policy implications with respect to
externalities are discussed. |
| URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/2451/29470 |
| Appears in Collections: | NET Institute Working Papers Series
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