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Journal Article
Consumer Information, Equilibrium Industry Price, and the Number of Sellers
Bell Journal of Economics
Author(s)
Define a reputation good to be any product or service for which
sellers' products are differentiated and consumers' search among
sellers consists of a series of inquiries to relatives, friends, and
associates for recommendations. Examples of reputation goods are
personal legal services and primary medical care. The paper shows that
if a monopolistically competitive industry sells a reputation good,
then an increased number of sellers may perversely cause the industry's
equilibrium price to rise. This result is based on maximizing behavior
on both sides of the market: consumers are assumed to search rationally
and sellers are assumed to profit maximize.
Date Published:
1979
Citations:
Satterthwaite, Mark. 1979. Consumer Information, Equilibrium Industry Price, and the Number of Sellers. Bell Journal of Economics. (2)483-502.