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Michael Waterson Presentation prepared for Encore conference, the Hague, April 2006

Switching and switching costs. Michael Waterson Presentation prepared for Encore conference, the Hague, April 2006. Plan. Theoretical issues and basic mechanisms Types of switching and empirical implications- links to other literatures

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Michael Waterson Presentation prepared for Encore conference, the Hague, April 2006

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  1. Switching and switching costs Michael Waterson Presentation prepared for Encore conference, the Hague, April 2006

  2. Plan • Theoretical issues and basic mechanisms • Types of switching and empirical implications- links to other literatures • Analysis of cases- when will welfare increase through switching? Extended examples of Petrin and GWW. • Competition in energy supply- impact on consumers • Broader implications and conclusions

  3. Types of switching costs: • Transaction costs • Learning costs- different facilities etc • Artificial switching costs- compatibility etc. • Switching costs of all types have the effect of relaxing competition

  4. Klemperer- mechanism

  5. Reflecting on the theory • Klemperer: consumers face a cost in switching between one firm and another. They are reluctant to switch, and therefore firms can get away with high prices • Shaffer and Zhang (+ others): firms are able to identify which consumers are their own old ones and which are customers of rivals. They can then decide whether to discriminate in price between these groups. • not clear whether it is better to set a lower price for new customers (pay to switch) or a lower price for loyal customers • in some circumstances, prices fall to both groups of consumers, a prisoners’ dilemma for the firms but better for consumers, so that: • Price discrimination has some desirable features.

  6. Categories of switching

  7. Links • Examining the impact of new products is similar in principle to examining the impact of competition in new areas. • Note the link to cost-benefit analysis techniques.

  8. Brown and Goolsbee: The role of the internet in improving information • Examine real price of term life assurance, controlling for age, State, etc. • 10% increase in numbers using the internet reduces average prices by 5%, after accounting for controls • Variance in prices is non-monotonic.

  9. Petrin- JPE 2002 • Valuing the introduction of a new good- the “minivan” • Introduced by Chrysler 1984; imitated rather imperfectly by GM and Ford in 1985 and 1986. • Chrysler’s product an immediate success • Markups are high initially on minivans but fall somewhat, markups on station wagons fall - the other firms lost significant profits as a result.

  10. Petrin (contd)- conceptually

  11. Petrin- (contd) • Utility specification where X is observed characteristics, xis unobserved characteristics, n is idiosyncratic tastes for characteristics, g measures heterogeneity in tastes for the observed characteristic in the population. Demand and costs are estimated.

  12. Petrin- results: welfare increases a good deal, most to consumers, 43% to non-minivan consumers

  13. Giulietti, Waddams, Waterson- EJ October 2005 • Switching in UK domestic gas market • involves both search and switching activity • Useful example of the development of competition • How competitive has the market become?

  14. Who switches gas supplier?- results of bivariate probit model • Middle – high income • high expected potential savings • Savings important • ease of switching unimportant • supplier reputation unimportant • Know bill • Changed house, car insurance, phone • Expect less than an hour to switch

  15. Market beliefs and switching behaviour • Importance of beliefs regarding how your current supplier will react • Strategic position of incumbent?

  16. Implications • Switching has affected a significant proportion of consumers- now around 47% in gas • However, many are remaining with their incumbent, and incumbents (gas and electricity) recognise they can maintain high prices to this group • Corroborative evidence on company purchase of incumbent consumers • Beliefs of consumers about competition matter

  17. Why the big welfare differences between Petrin (large) and GWW (small)? • No explicit switching cost in Petrin- since people will be switching from an older vehicle • In Petrin, the new product reduces the price of the old product to consumers, but also adds significantly to consumer welfare because it satisfies many needs better. • The new product has a big positive impact on consumers and a smaller and largely negative impact overall on producers. • In GWW, the benefits to consumers are largely gains at the expense of producers. Demand overall very inelastic, so little net social welfare gain. • Introduction costs and reorganisation costs (essentially ignored in Petrin). • No consideration of cost reductions in GWW.

  18. Implications of the comparison • There will be significant distributional impacts, between producers and consumers and within consumer groups • But in many cases, the net benefits of a new product that largely replaces an old one for consumers will be small, particularly if demand rather inelastic. • How do we know whether new products that satisfy needs better will not be forthcoming? They may indeed be. The point is that we have not conceived of them yet. • Inevitably, introducing choice where there has been none before is somewhat of a leap in the dark, because certain of the benefits only arise if firms find new ways of doing old things.

  19. Benefits of supply competition • Is it the fact of competition/ allowing switching, the impact on users, or the ability to bargain on tariffs that matters in determining price? • What is the impact?

  20. There does seem to be a measurable impact of supply competition on prices paid by consumers of electricity and, perhaps, gas. • Electricity-

  21. Benefits from competition • Lower prices • Innovation? • Choice BUT: • Distributional changes • Mistakes by consumers and others • Costs on the system • Limited new suppliers

  22. What is the optimal degree of switching? No switching consistent with: • No search or • Everyone happy. • There can be too much switching- it imposes costs on the system • Is it better to allow “special deals” or uniform category pricing? • Role of contract length.

  23. If I were a psychologist… • Are people more easily fooled in new choice situations? • Do they look to the longer term? • Is it sensible to move from 100% paternalism to 0% paternalism? • What about guided or “framed” choice? • Should there be a “backstop”?

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