Conditioning Prices on Purchase History
Carnegie Mellon University · University of California, Berkeley
Abstract
The rapid advance in information technology now makes it feasible for sellers to condition their price offers on consumers’ prior purchase behavior. In this paper we examine when it is profitable to engage in this form of price discrimination when consumers can adopt strategies to protect their privacy. Our baseline model involves rational consumers with constant valuations for the goods being sold and a monopoly merchant who can commit to a pricing policy. Applying results from the prior literature, we show that although it is feasible to price so as to distinguish high-value and low-value consumers, the merchant will never find it optimal to do so. We then consider various generalizations of this model, such…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 32.52
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 35
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Commit
- Monopoly
- Competition (biology)
- Value (mathematics)
- Microeconomics
- Price discrimination
- Economics
- Business
- Peace, Justice and strong institutions