Document Type
Discussion Paper
Publication Date
3-1-2020
CFDP Number
2224R
CFDP Revision Date
May 1, 2020
CFDP Pages
60
Journal of Economic Literature (JEL) Code(s)
D41, D42, D43, D83
Abstract
Consider a market with identical firms offering a homogeneous good. A consumer obtains price quotes from a subset of firms and buys from the firm offering the lowest price. The “price count” is the number of firms from which the consumer obtains a quote. For any given ex ante distribution of the price count, we obtain a tight upper bound (under first-order stochastic dominance) on the equilibrium distribution of sale prices. The bound holds across all models of firms’ common-prior higher-order beliefs about the price count, including the extreme cases of full information ( firms know the price count) and no information (firms only know the ex-ante distribution of the price count). A qualitative implication of our results is that a small ex ante probability that the price count is one can lead to a large increase in the expected price. The bound also applies in a wide class of models where the price count distribution is endogenized, including models of simultaneous and sequential consumer search.
Recommended Citation
Bergemann, Dirk; Brooks, Benjamin; and Morris, Stephen, "Search, Information, and Prices" (2020). Cowles Foundation Discussion Papers. 23.
https://elischolar.library.yale.edu/cowles-discussion-paper-series/23