Why do cable TV companies force people to purchase channels they don’t even like? Wouldn’t consumers be better off if they could purchase channels individually rather than only as part of large packages? Not necessarily. This research shows that channel prices would be higher on average if they were offered individually, and if the increase in prices is large enough it can more than offset the benefits of unbundling
The market for multi-channel video programming has undergone considerable change in the last 15 year...
The FCC\u27s pay cable policy to increase television diversity through deregulation has backfired. O...
An influential theoretical literature supports a discriminatory explanation for product bundling: it...
Why do cable TV companies force people to purchase channels they don’t even like? Wouldn’t consumers...
We conduct a numerical analysis of bundling’s impact on a monopolist’s pricing and product choices a...
Bundling can be a pricing mechanism by which monopolists capture economic surplus from consumers. We...
The large cable programmers, who provide most of the popular cable (and broadcast) television progra...
A cable operator chooses to bundle or provide programs a ̀ la carte by striking a balance between th...
I consider the literature surrounding the television market. Two important issues in the literature ...
I consider the literature surrounding the television market. Two important issues in the literature ...
present the basic bundling models and relate the framework to the multichannel television market. Th...
We measure how the bundling of television channels affects short-run welfare. We estimate an industr...
Previous studies of the demand for cable television focused exclusively on only one aspect of the de...
This article applies the principles of economic theory to the case of cable television in France. Mi...
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has released two reports on a la carte pricing of cabl...
The market for multi-channel video programming has undergone considerable change in the last 15 year...
The FCC\u27s pay cable policy to increase television diversity through deregulation has backfired. O...
An influential theoretical literature supports a discriminatory explanation for product bundling: it...
Why do cable TV companies force people to purchase channels they don’t even like? Wouldn’t consumers...
We conduct a numerical analysis of bundling’s impact on a monopolist’s pricing and product choices a...
Bundling can be a pricing mechanism by which monopolists capture economic surplus from consumers. We...
The large cable programmers, who provide most of the popular cable (and broadcast) television progra...
A cable operator chooses to bundle or provide programs a ̀ la carte by striking a balance between th...
I consider the literature surrounding the television market. Two important issues in the literature ...
I consider the literature surrounding the television market. Two important issues in the literature ...
present the basic bundling models and relate the framework to the multichannel television market. Th...
We measure how the bundling of television channels affects short-run welfare. We estimate an industr...
Previous studies of the demand for cable television focused exclusively on only one aspect of the de...
This article applies the principles of economic theory to the case of cable television in France. Mi...
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has released two reports on a la carte pricing of cabl...
The market for multi-channel video programming has undergone considerable change in the last 15 year...
The FCC\u27s pay cable policy to increase television diversity through deregulation has backfired. O...
An influential theoretical literature supports a discriminatory explanation for product bundling: it...