Regulating Endogenous Customer Switching Costs

Melbourne Business School Working Paper No.2000-12

40 Pages Posted: 10 Oct 2000

See all articles by Joshua S. Gans

Joshua S. Gans

University of Toronto - Rotman School of Management; NBER

Stephen P. King

Monash University - Department of Economics; Productivity Commission

Date Written: September 2000

Abstract

Customer switching costs can limit the opportunities for new entry in some markets. Incumbent firms may be able to reduce these switching costs, but have no incentive to do so without regulatory intervention. For example, in telecommunications, incumbent firms can provide customers with number portability, reducing the cost customers face when moving to a new carrier. This paper considers alternative regulatory policies to deal with these endogenous switching costs. We find that rules requiring an incumbent firm to ameliorate customer switching costs lead to lower pricing by the incumbent but higher pricing by the entrant. These rules can reduce social surplus, particularly if average customer switching costs are relatively low compared to amelioration costs. Regulatory rules also affect the efficiency of the decision to reduce customers' switching costs and the technological choice of the incumbent firm. For example 'customer pays' regulation encourages an efficient amelioration choice but provides poor incentives for the incumbent to choose a least cost amelioration technology. We consider the addition of a 'buy back' rule to standard incumbent-firm-pays regulation and show that this is always preferred to standard firms-pay regulation. Buy-back rules dominate other standard regulatory rules when firms can price discriminate on the basis of customers' switching costs. Further, buy-back rules lead to more efficient technological choices by the incumbent firm.

JEL Classification: L51, L13, D4

Suggested Citation

Gans, Joshua S. and King, Stephen Peter, Regulating Endogenous Customer Switching Costs (September 2000). Melbourne Business School Working Paper No.2000-12, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=242140 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.242140

Joshua S. Gans (Contact Author)

University of Toronto - Rotman School of Management ( email )

Canada

HOME PAGE: http://www.joshuagans.com

NBER ( email )

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Stephen Peter King

Monash University - Department of Economics ( email )

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Clayton, Victoria 3800
Australia

Productivity Commission ( email )

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Melbourne, Victoria, Victoria 3000
Australia

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