This paper explains three things in a unified way. First, how e-commerce can generate price equilibria, where physical shops either compete with virtual shops for consumers with Internet access, or alternatively, sell only to consumers with no Internet access. Second, how these price equilibria might involve price dispersion on-line. Third, why prices may be higher on-line. For this purpose we develop a model where e-commerce: reduces consumers search costs, involves trade-offs for consumers, and reduces retailing costs
The Internet has dramatically reduced search costs for customers through tools such as shopbots. The...
As the Internet develops into a robust channel for commerce, it will be important to understand the ...
This paper analyses market efficiency and the role of the virtual location in digital markets using ...
This paper explains three things in a unified way. First, how e-commerce can generate price equilibr...
Despite expectations in the late 1990s that the Internet would lead to frictionless commerce, empiri...
Would e-retailing lower prices? Preliminary empirical studies report mixed results. Drawing from the...
While a fast-growing body of research has looked at how the advent and di®usion of e- commerce has a...
Information systems can serve as intermediaries between the buyers and the sellers in a market, crea...
Throughout economic history, changes in technology have had a substantial impact on consumers' searc...
Conventional wisdom seems to claim that, by lowering the cost of distribution and by making search e...
textabstractDespite the mixed empirical evidence, many economists still hold to the view that Intern...
Price dispersion among commodity goods is typically attributed to consumer search costs. This paper ...
We analyze a market where firms compete in a conventional and an electronicretail channel. Consumers...
When physically similar products, of similar quality, are offered by retailers both online and offli...
The Internet has dramatically reduced search costs for customers through tools such as shopbots. The...
The Internet has dramatically reduced search costs for customers through tools such as shopbots. The...
As the Internet develops into a robust channel for commerce, it will be important to understand the ...
This paper analyses market efficiency and the role of the virtual location in digital markets using ...
This paper explains three things in a unified way. First, how e-commerce can generate price equilibr...
Despite expectations in the late 1990s that the Internet would lead to frictionless commerce, empiri...
Would e-retailing lower prices? Preliminary empirical studies report mixed results. Drawing from the...
While a fast-growing body of research has looked at how the advent and di®usion of e- commerce has a...
Information systems can serve as intermediaries between the buyers and the sellers in a market, crea...
Throughout economic history, changes in technology have had a substantial impact on consumers' searc...
Conventional wisdom seems to claim that, by lowering the cost of distribution and by making search e...
textabstractDespite the mixed empirical evidence, many economists still hold to the view that Intern...
Price dispersion among commodity goods is typically attributed to consumer search costs. This paper ...
We analyze a market where firms compete in a conventional and an electronicretail channel. Consumers...
When physically similar products, of similar quality, are offered by retailers both online and offli...
The Internet has dramatically reduced search costs for customers through tools such as shopbots. The...
The Internet has dramatically reduced search costs for customers through tools such as shopbots. The...
As the Internet develops into a robust channel for commerce, it will be important to understand the ...
This paper analyses market efficiency and the role of the virtual location in digital markets using ...