We consider the intertemporal price discrimination problem of a durable good monopolist facing a population of consumers who are time inconsistent. We show that price trajectories, profits and welfare are sensitive to consumers’ first- and second-order beliefs regarding their time preferences. Surprisingly, we find that sales and profits are largest when consumers are sophisticated, i.e., when consumers hold correct expectations on their own future choices. The monopolist is thus unable to take advantage of consumers’ naiveté, and could instead benefit from informing consumers about their true preferences and commitment problems, or otherwise communicate its beliefs about them
For many goods (such as experience goods or addictive goods), consumers' preferences may change over...
How do firms respond to consumers' time inconsistency? This paper studies the optimal design of none...
The canonical model of a firm selling to heterogeneous, but indistinguishable, consumers implies tha...
We study the profit-maximizing price path of a monopolist selling a durable good to buyers who arriv...
This paper considers the intertemporal pricing problem for a monopolist marketing a new product. The...
This note analyzes a model of a monopolist selling multiple goods to a continuum of heterogeneous co...
Firms in durable good product markets face incentives to intertemporally price discriminate, by sett...
This paper investigates the optimality of intertemporal price discrimination for a durable-good mono...
We study the two‐product monopoly profit maximization problem for a seller who can commit to a dynam...
We consider the case of a monopolist supplying an improving durable product to a population that is ...
Firms in durable good product markets face incentives to intertemporally price discriminate, by sett...
International audienceA durable good monopolist faces a continuum of heterogeneous customers who mak...
We consider sequential competition among sellers, who recognize future sellers as potential competit...
[This item is a preserved copy. To view the original, visit http://econtheory.org/] We st...
This paper develops a general two-period model of product line pricing with customer recognition. Sp...
For many goods (such as experience goods or addictive goods), consumers' preferences may change over...
How do firms respond to consumers' time inconsistency? This paper studies the optimal design of none...
The canonical model of a firm selling to heterogeneous, but indistinguishable, consumers implies tha...
We study the profit-maximizing price path of a monopolist selling a durable good to buyers who arriv...
This paper considers the intertemporal pricing problem for a monopolist marketing a new product. The...
This note analyzes a model of a monopolist selling multiple goods to a continuum of heterogeneous co...
Firms in durable good product markets face incentives to intertemporally price discriminate, by sett...
This paper investigates the optimality of intertemporal price discrimination for a durable-good mono...
We study the two‐product monopoly profit maximization problem for a seller who can commit to a dynam...
We consider the case of a monopolist supplying an improving durable product to a population that is ...
Firms in durable good product markets face incentives to intertemporally price discriminate, by sett...
International audienceA durable good monopolist faces a continuum of heterogeneous customers who mak...
We consider sequential competition among sellers, who recognize future sellers as potential competit...
[This item is a preserved copy. To view the original, visit http://econtheory.org/] We st...
This paper develops a general two-period model of product line pricing with customer recognition. Sp...
For many goods (such as experience goods or addictive goods), consumers' preferences may change over...
How do firms respond to consumers' time inconsistency? This paper studies the optimal design of none...
The canonical model of a firm selling to heterogeneous, but indistinguishable, consumers implies tha...