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THE DEFENSE OF PRICE DISCRIMINATION IN NETWORK AND INFORMATION GOODS MARKETS

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dc.rights.license CC BY eng
dc.contributor.author Soukal, Ivan cze
dc.date.accessioned 2025-12-05T20:36:49Z
dc.date.available 2025-12-05T20:36:49Z
dc.date.issued 2021 eng
dc.identifier.issn 1212-3609 eng
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12603/2512
dc.description.abstract It is not uncommon that articles focused on consumer-price interaction in the network and information goods market swiftly condemn price discrimination as an obfuscation, on-purpose price complexity, or market failure. The reason is a general neoclassical rule of an efficient market where prices are set at marginal cost with no price discrimination. However, the matter is more complicated. This review provides authors an overview of why, where, and which type of price discrimination should be viewed by different optics. Goods such as software, cell carrier services, electronic newspapers subscription, electric energy supply, payment accounts, books, copyrighted content streaming, etc, cannot be treated like manufactured goods. The reasons are specific conditions - substantial and/or repeated fixed/sunk cost, economies of scale, and demand heterogeneity. Recognized economist W. J. Baumol described marginal cost set prices under these conditions as an 'economic suicide'. Reviewed articles showed that firms are forced to adopt price discrimination in order to recover their costs and to serve more consumer segments. Reviewed authors provided facts to support the use of multipart tariffs, dynamic pricing, versioning, bundling, and Ramsey pricing. These conclusions are used for suggestions on how several studies of information and network goods should be modified. Modifications are related mostly to model assumptions and pricing conclusions. I argue that, in the case of information and network goods, there is justified price discrimination. Hence, there is a certain justified level of price complexity that has to be accepted and not taken as automated evidence of inefficiency, market power, and consumer exploitation. eng
dc.format p. 39-55 eng
dc.language.iso eng eng
dc.publisher TECHNICAL UNIV LIBEREC eng
dc.relation.ispartof E & M EKONOMIE A MANAGEMENT, volume 24, issue: 4 eng
dc.subject Price discrimination eng
dc.subject marginal cost eng
dc.subject price complexity eng
dc.subject price obfuscation eng
dc.subject network goods eng
dc.subject information goods eng
dc.title THE DEFENSE OF PRICE DISCRIMINATION IN NETWORK AND INFORMATION GOODS MARKETS eng
dc.type article eng
dc.identifier.obd 43878618 eng
dc.identifier.wos 000733816600003 eng
dc.identifier.doi 10.15240/tul/001/2021-4-003 eng
dc.publicationstatus postprint eng
dc.peerreviewed yes eng
dc.source.url https://dspace5.zcu.cz/bitstream/11025/46496/1/EM_4_2021_03.pdf cze
dc.rights.access Open Access eng


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