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The Max-Min-Min Principle of Product Differentiation

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CONTRIBUTORS:
  Author Ansari, Asim
  Author Economides, Nicholas (Stern School of Business, New York University)
  Author Steckel, Joel
JOURNAL:
  Journal of regional science, 38(??), 207 - 230.
YEAR: 1998
PUB TYPE: Journal Article
SUBJECT(S): The Max-Min-Min Principle of Product Differentiation
DISCIPLINE: Economics
HTTP: http://www.stern.nyu.edu/networks/96-10.pdf
LANGUAGE: English
PUB ID: 103-396-257 (Last edited on 2003/11/04 18:29:32 US/Mountain)
SPONSOR(S):
 
ABSTRACT:
We analyze two and three-dimensional variants of Hotelling's model of differentiated products. In our setup, consumers can place different importance on each product attribute; this is measured by a weight in the disutility of distance in each dimension. Two firms play a two-stage game; they choose locations in stage 1 and prices in stage 2. We seek subgame-perfect equilibria. We find that all such equilibria have maximal differentiation in one dimension only; in all other dimensions, they have minimum differentiation. An equilibrium with maximal differentiation in a certain dimension occurs when consumers place sufficient importance (weight) on that attribute. Thus, depending on the importance consumers place on each attribute, in two dimensions there is a max-min equilibrium, a min-max equilibrium, or both. In three dimensions, depending on the weights, there can be a max-min-min equilibrium, a min-max-min equilibrium, a min-min-max equilibrium, any two of them, or all three.
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