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Academic Journals
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- 1From:Journal of Computer Science and Technology (Vol. 37, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedSerious price discrimination emerges with the development of big data and mobile networks, which harms the interests of consumers. To solve this problem, we propose a blockchain- based price consensus protocol to solve...
- 2From:E+M Ekonomie a Management (Vol. 24, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedIt 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....
- 3From:Iowa Law Review (Vol. 107, Issue 3)ABSTRACT: From websites to aisles, stores are collecting massive amounts of data on their consumers. This Note looks at how brick and mortar stores use this information to price discriminate--charging different customers...
- 4From:Computational Intelligence and Neuroscience (Vol. 2022) Peer-ReviewedThis paper focuses on the phenomenon of “big data killing” implied in e-commerce and discusses how to take the government as the lead to coordinately supervise the price discrimination behavior of e-commerce companies...
- 5From:Discrete Dynamics in Nature and Society (Vol. 2020) Peer-ReviewedAssuming the two retailers decide whether to acquire information to segment consumers and price them differently, we investigate the problem of information acquisition and third-degree price discrimination in the supply...
- 6From:Wirtschaftsdienst (Vol. 100, Issue 10) Peer-ReviewedWe discuss personalised pricing with big data. Personalised prices tend to shift surpluses from consumers to firms, at the same time they have the potential to increase competition. The dominant effects depend upon the...
- 7From:Discrete Dynamics in Nature and SocietyPeer-ReviewedThis paper introduces a new Cournot duopoly game and gives an applied study for price discrimination in a market by dynamic methods. One of two oligopolies has two different prices for a homogeneous product, while the...
- 8From:Economic Theory (Vol. 65, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThis paper proposes a theory of price discrimination based on consumer loss aversion. A seller offers a menu of bundles before a consumer learns his willingness to pay, and the consumer experiences gain-loss utility...
- 9From:Marketing Science (Vol. 36, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedAbstract. We study the strategic impacts of behavioral price discrimination (BPD) on manufacturers and retailers in a distribution channel when there are switching costs in consumer demand. Unlike previous empirical...
- 10From:Economic Inquiry (Vol. 55, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedWe propose a model with two markets to analyze the welfare implications of price discrimination with quality differences. In each market a local firm that operates in that market only competes against a global firm that...
- 11From:Harvard Journal of Law & Technology (Vol. 21, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedI. INTRODUCTION PANACEA: FROM GREEK PANAKEIA, A REMEDY OR CURE REPUTED TO HEAL ALL DISEASES. (1) According to the conventional wisdom, price discrimination offers two advantages compared to uniform or linear...
- 12From:The Logistics and Transportation Review (Vol. 28, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe debate ove whether shipping conferences practice economic price discrimination has recently been revived in the United States by a dispute between the Federal Maritime Commission and the Federal Trade Commission....
- 13From:Antitrust (Vol. 32, Issue 1)WHEN CONGRESS ENACTED THE Sherman and Clayton Acts over a century ago, the term "robot" did not exist. (1) The framers of our antitrust laws would likely be amazed by the increasingly powerful and autonomous...
- 14From:RAND Journal of Economics (Vol. 35, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedA common thread in the theory literature on price discrimination has been the ambiguous welfare effects for consumers and the rise in profit for firms, relative to uniform pricing. In this study I resolve the ambiguity...
- 15From:Southern Economic Journal (Vol. 66, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedA study describing problems in teaching price discrimination, which is defined as a variation in the price-cost ratio, or differentials, across units or across groups of buyers. The research gives emphasis on three...
- 16From:RAND Journal of Economics (Vol. 32, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedWe model firms as supplying utility directly to consumers. The equilibrium outcome of competition in utility space depends on the relationship [pi](u) between profit and average utility per consumer. Public policy...
- 17From:Marketing Science (Vol. 35, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThis paper examines how firms should allocate their advertising budgets between consumers who have a high preference for their products (i.e., strong segment) and those who prefer competing products (i.e., weak segment)....
- 18From:Contemporary Economic Policy (Vol. 16, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThis paper reports on an econometric analysis of the pricing structures at 46 public access golf courses in the San Francisco area. Comparisons among several attempts to get a generic measure of price discrimination...
- 19From:Southern Economic Journal (Vol. 61, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedEconomies of scale have a two-pronged weight on the welfare of price discrimination. Economies of scale will improve the welfare gain if output and Marshallian welfare increase under price discrimination. However,...
- 20From:Management Science (Vol. 55, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedWe consider a general model of monopoly price discrimination and characterize the conditions under which price discrimination is and is not profitable. We show that an important condition for profitable price...