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Quality Overprovision in Cable Television Markets

Authors :
Matthew Shum
Oleksandr Shcherbakov
Gregory S. Crawford
University of Zurich
Source :
American Economic Review. 109:956-995
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Economic Association, 2019.

Abstract

We measure the welfare distortions from endogenous quality choice in imperfectly competitive markets. For US cable television markets between 1997–2006, prices are 33 percent to 74 percent higher and qualities 23 percent to 55 percent higher than socially optimal. Such quality overprovision contradicts classic results in the literature and our analysis shows that it results from the presence of competition from high-end satellite TV providers: without the competitive pressure from satellite companies, cable TV monopolists would instead engage in quality degradation. For welfare, quality overprovision implies cable customers would prefer smaller, lower-quality cable bundles at a lower price, amounting to a twofold increase in consumer surplus for the average consumer. (JEL L13, L15, L82)

Details

ISSN :
00028282
Volume :
109
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Economic Review
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8611957363db8cc2f4b1f7fe4024255d