Spurious Complexity and Common Standards in Markets for Consumer Goods
Code:
07-20
Authors:
Gaudeul, A. & Sugden, R.
Date:
01 Dec 2007
Abstract
Spurious Complexity and Common Standards in Markets for Consumer Goods
By Gaudeul, A. & Sugden, R.
Abstract: Behavioural and industrial economists have argued that, because of cognitive limitations, consumers are liable to make sub-optimal choices in complex decision problems. Firms can exploit these limitations by introducing spurious complexity into tariff structures, weakening price competition. This paper models a countervailing force. Consumers’ choice problems are simplified if competing firms follow common conventions about tariff structures. Because such a ‘common standard’ promotes price competition, a firm’s use of it signals that its products offer value for money. If consumers recognize this effect, there can be a stable equilibrium in which firms use common standards and set competitive prices.