Effects of Product Availability: Experimental Evidence
Christopher Conlon and
Julie Mortimer
No 798, Boston College Working Papers in Economics from Boston College Department of Economics
Abstract:
Product availability impacts many industries such as transportation, events, and retail, yet little empirical evidence documents the importance of stocking decisions for firm profits, vertical relationships, or consumers. We conduct several experiments, exogenously removing top-selling products from a set of vending machines and analyzing substitution patterns and profit impacts of the changed product availability using non- parametric analyses and structural demand estimation. We find substantial switching to alternate products, and evidence of misaligned incentives between upstream and downstream firms in the choice of which products to carry. We discuss the trade-offs of both empirical approaches for analyzing product availability effects generally.
Date: 2010-10-09
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Working Paper: Effects of Product Availability: Experimental Evidence (2010)
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