What's on the table : revenue management and the welfare gap In the US airline industry

Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management, 2012. === Cataloged from PDF version of thesis. === Includes bibliographical references (p. 129-133). === This thesis explores the potential improvements in Revenue Management from two distinct perspectives. The firs...

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Main Author: Chen, Yiwei, Ph. D. Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Other Authors: Vivek. F. Farias.
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/77819
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spelling ndltd-MIT-oai-dspace.mit.edu-1721.1-778192019-05-02T16:37:34Z What's on the table : revenue management and the welfare gap In the US airline industry What is on the table Revenue management and the welfare gap In the US airline industry Chen, Yiwei, Ph. D. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Vivek. F. Farias. Sloan School of Management. Sloan School of Management. Sloan School of Management. Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management, 2012. Cataloged from PDF version of thesis. Includes bibliographical references (p. 129-133). This thesis explores the potential improvements in Revenue Management from two distinct perspectives. The first piece of work is to explore the potential operational improvements, in which we aim to develop competitive and robust dynamic pricing rules in a market whose evolution can be highly volatile and hardly predictable. We do specifically by considering the 'classical' single product dynamic pricing problem allowing the 'scale' of demand intensity to be modulated by an exogenous 'market size' stochastic process. This is a natural model of dynamically changing market conditions. We show that for a broad family of Gaussian market size processes, simple dynamic pricing rules that are essentially agnostic to the specification of this market size process perform provably well. The pricing policies we develop are shown to compensate for forecast imperfections (or a lack of forecast information altogether) by frequent re-optimization and re-estimation of the 'instantaneous' market size. The second piece of work is to understand the potential first order changes. We choose US airline industry to investigate and measure its resource allocative efficiency. The past decade has been a difficult one for the US airline industry. On the one hand, airline profits have been highly variable with net losses over the last ten years standing in the tens of billions of dollars. On the other hand, consumers continue to complain of predatory pricing and other such tactics (See Wirtz et al. [2003]). Our goal here will simply be to get an estimate of what is possible moving forward. We approach this task from an econometric perspective: we produce a status-quo dollar estimate of total welfare in the US airline industry. We then compute a number of benchmarks that we posit are conservative estimates of what optimal welfare in the industry might look like under mechanisms resembling existing dynamic pricing practice. Our benchmark estimates will leverage a unique, proprietary data set on ticket purchases via the 'micro' BLP approach Berry et al. [2004]. We will show that the welfare gap is surprisingly large, raising the possibility that a combination of innovative selling mechanisms and legislation can make a dramatic difference to airline profitability and consumer satisfaction alike. by Yiwei Chen. Ph.D. 2013-03-13T15:50:56Z 2013-03-13T15:50:56Z 2012 2012 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/77819 828427529 eng M.I.T. theses are protected by copyright. They may be viewed from this source for any purpose, but reproduction or distribution in any format is prohibited without written permission. See provided URL for inquiries about permission. http://dspace.mit.edu/handle/1721.1/7582 133 p. application/pdf Massachusetts Institute of Technology
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
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topic Sloan School of Management.
spellingShingle Sloan School of Management.
Chen, Yiwei, Ph. D. Massachusetts Institute of Technology
What's on the table : revenue management and the welfare gap In the US airline industry
description Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management, 2012. === Cataloged from PDF version of thesis. === Includes bibliographical references (p. 129-133). === This thesis explores the potential improvements in Revenue Management from two distinct perspectives. The first piece of work is to explore the potential operational improvements, in which we aim to develop competitive and robust dynamic pricing rules in a market whose evolution can be highly volatile and hardly predictable. We do specifically by considering the 'classical' single product dynamic pricing problem allowing the 'scale' of demand intensity to be modulated by an exogenous 'market size' stochastic process. This is a natural model of dynamically changing market conditions. We show that for a broad family of Gaussian market size processes, simple dynamic pricing rules that are essentially agnostic to the specification of this market size process perform provably well. The pricing policies we develop are shown to compensate for forecast imperfections (or a lack of forecast information altogether) by frequent re-optimization and re-estimation of the 'instantaneous' market size. The second piece of work is to understand the potential first order changes. We choose US airline industry to investigate and measure its resource allocative efficiency. The past decade has been a difficult one for the US airline industry. On the one hand, airline profits have been highly variable with net losses over the last ten years standing in the tens of billions of dollars. On the other hand, consumers continue to complain of predatory pricing and other such tactics (See Wirtz et al. [2003]). Our goal here will simply be to get an estimate of what is possible moving forward. We approach this task from an econometric perspective: we produce a status-quo dollar estimate of total welfare in the US airline industry. We then compute a number of benchmarks that we posit are conservative estimates of what optimal welfare in the industry might look like under mechanisms resembling existing dynamic pricing practice. Our benchmark estimates will leverage a unique, proprietary data set on ticket purchases via the 'micro' BLP approach Berry et al. [2004]. We will show that the welfare gap is surprisingly large, raising the possibility that a combination of innovative selling mechanisms and legislation can make a dramatic difference to airline profitability and consumer satisfaction alike. === by Yiwei Chen. === Ph.D.
author2 Vivek. F. Farias.
author_facet Vivek. F. Farias.
Chen, Yiwei, Ph. D. Massachusetts Institute of Technology
author Chen, Yiwei, Ph. D. Massachusetts Institute of Technology
author_sort Chen, Yiwei, Ph. D. Massachusetts Institute of Technology
title What's on the table : revenue management and the welfare gap In the US airline industry
title_short What's on the table : revenue management and the welfare gap In the US airline industry
title_full What's on the table : revenue management and the welfare gap In the US airline industry
title_fullStr What's on the table : revenue management and the welfare gap In the US airline industry
title_full_unstemmed What's on the table : revenue management and the welfare gap In the US airline industry
title_sort what's on the table : revenue management and the welfare gap in the us airline industry
publisher Massachusetts Institute of Technology
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/77819
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