A cable operator chooses to bundle or provide programs à la carte by striking a balance between maximizing total surplus and minimizing transfer payments to program providers. We show, using general demand and cost functions, that a cable operator’s decision to bundle maximizes total producer surplus if the cable operator’s bargaining power is sufficiently high, and that a cable operator in a weak bargaining position might strategically choose to unbundle viewer channels in order to enhance its bargaining position with individual program suppliers, even when this decision reduces total surplus. Thus, it is plausible that regulations that cap market share or impose à la carte on cable operators may reduce total surplus. Under more restrictive ...
Pay-TV firms compete both downstream to attract viewers and upstream to acquire broadcasting rights....
present the basic bundling models and relate the framework to the multichannel television market. Th...
Why do cable TV companies force people to purchase channels they don’t even like? Wouldn’t consumers...
A cable operator chooses to bundle or provide programs a ̀ la carte by striking a balance between th...
We conduct a numerical analysis of bundling’s impact on a monopolist’s pricing and product choices a...
An influential theoretical literature supports a discriminatory explanation for product bundling: it...
We examine the effect of buyer merger on bilateral negotiations between a supplier and n buyers. Mer...
We measure how the bundling of television channels affects short-run welfare. We estimate an industr...
We measure how the bundling of television channels affects short-run welfare. We estimate an industr...
An influential theoretical literature supports a discriminatory explanation for prod-uct bundling: i...
A modern defense of public utility regulation has arisen from the "transactions costs" literature. T...
* The authors would like to thank David Sappington and Simon Wilkie for very helpful comments on an ...
We develop an upstream–downstream model to analyze downstream firms’ incentives to bundle. In our fr...
As a result of the 1992 Cable Television Act, the FCC set out regulations intended to encourage comp...
A TV platform provides content to viewers and viewers to advertising producers. We study platform pr...
Pay-TV firms compete both downstream to attract viewers and upstream to acquire broadcasting rights....
present the basic bundling models and relate the framework to the multichannel television market. Th...
Why do cable TV companies force people to purchase channels they don’t even like? Wouldn’t consumers...
A cable operator chooses to bundle or provide programs a ̀ la carte by striking a balance between th...
We conduct a numerical analysis of bundling’s impact on a monopolist’s pricing and product choices a...
An influential theoretical literature supports a discriminatory explanation for product bundling: it...
We examine the effect of buyer merger on bilateral negotiations between a supplier and n buyers. Mer...
We measure how the bundling of television channels affects short-run welfare. We estimate an industr...
We measure how the bundling of television channels affects short-run welfare. We estimate an industr...
An influential theoretical literature supports a discriminatory explanation for prod-uct bundling: i...
A modern defense of public utility regulation has arisen from the "transactions costs" literature. T...
* The authors would like to thank David Sappington and Simon Wilkie for very helpful comments on an ...
We develop an upstream–downstream model to analyze downstream firms’ incentives to bundle. In our fr...
As a result of the 1992 Cable Television Act, the FCC set out regulations intended to encourage comp...
A TV platform provides content to viewers and viewers to advertising producers. We study platform pr...
Pay-TV firms compete both downstream to attract viewers and upstream to acquire broadcasting rights....
present the basic bundling models and relate the framework to the multichannel television market. Th...
Why do cable TV companies force people to purchase channels they don’t even like? Wouldn’t consumers...