Technology Advancement in Network Markets and Agent Bargaining
I extend the Katz and Shapiro (1985) oligopoly model with network effects to encompass products with differing technological levels. I focus on a version of the model in which firms can invest in order to improve the probability that they advance their technology from a low level to a high level. I...
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ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-5960002016-02-11T03:00:34Z Technology Advancement in Network Markets and Agent Bargaining Ingersoll, William Robert Reynolds, Stanley Reynolds, Stanley Fishback, Price V. Stegeman, Mark Walker, Mark Economics Experiment Industrial Organization Networks Technology Bargaining I extend the Katz and Shapiro (1985) oligopoly model with network effects to encompass products with differing technological levels. I focus on a version of the model in which firms can invest in order to improve the probability that they advance their technology from a low level to a high level. I find that better available technology, lower adoption costs, and stronger network effects increase the rate of technological advancement and social welfare. Incompatible networks have lower total surplus but higher adoption rates. The investment competition dissipates to some degree the potential producer rents from successful advancement, particularly in the incompatible network case where increased competition can result in lower total welfare. A policy imposing a technology standard (via a high type technology requirement) yields the highest adoption rates, but negatively affects overall welfare. Analysis of the optimal tax/subsidy policy shows that taxes are optimal in most cases, since the private incentive to advance technology outweighs the social incentive. Negotiations in the real world can rarely be represented by a simple bargaining session between two parties. Agent bargaining, when one player represents another party in a bargaining situation for some form of compensation, is one such complicating circumstance from the real world. I explore the effects that this third entity has on the outcome of negotiations. I conduct a laboratory experiment emulating a simple example of agent bargaining. I test a hypothesis formulated using sequential-Nash-bargaining and also propose behavioral explanations for the observed behavior. I find that sequential-Nash-bargaining does a poor job of explaining our observations, and that using a weighted minimization of the differences between each of the three parties as a focal point provides a promising alternative. 2016 text Electronic Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/596000 en_US Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona. |
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en_US |
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Economics Experiment Industrial Organization Networks Technology Bargaining |
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Economics Experiment Industrial Organization Networks Technology Bargaining Ingersoll, William Robert Technology Advancement in Network Markets and Agent Bargaining |
description |
I extend the Katz and Shapiro (1985) oligopoly model with network effects to encompass products with differing technological levels. I focus on a version of the model in which firms can invest in order to improve the probability that they advance their technology from a low level to a high level. I find that better available technology, lower adoption costs, and stronger network effects increase the rate of technological advancement and social welfare. Incompatible networks have lower total surplus but higher adoption rates. The investment competition dissipates to some degree the potential producer rents from successful advancement, particularly in the incompatible network case where increased competition can result in lower total welfare. A policy imposing a technology standard (via a high type technology requirement) yields the highest adoption rates, but negatively affects overall welfare. Analysis of the optimal tax/subsidy policy shows that taxes are optimal in most cases, since the private incentive to advance technology outweighs the social incentive. Negotiations in the real world can rarely be represented by a simple bargaining session between two parties. Agent bargaining, when one player represents another party in a bargaining situation for some form of compensation, is one such complicating circumstance from the real world. I explore the effects that this third entity has on the outcome of negotiations. I conduct a laboratory experiment emulating a simple example of agent bargaining. I test a hypothesis formulated using sequential-Nash-bargaining and also propose behavioral explanations for the observed behavior. I find that sequential-Nash-bargaining does a poor job of explaining our observations, and that using a weighted minimization of the differences between each of the three parties as a focal point provides a promising alternative. |
author2 |
Reynolds, Stanley |
author_facet |
Reynolds, Stanley Ingersoll, William Robert |
author |
Ingersoll, William Robert |
author_sort |
Ingersoll, William Robert |
title |
Technology Advancement in Network Markets and Agent Bargaining |
title_short |
Technology Advancement in Network Markets and Agent Bargaining |
title_full |
Technology Advancement in Network Markets and Agent Bargaining |
title_fullStr |
Technology Advancement in Network Markets and Agent Bargaining |
title_full_unstemmed |
Technology Advancement in Network Markets and Agent Bargaining |
title_sort |
technology advancement in network markets and agent bargaining |
publisher |
The University of Arizona. |
publishDate |
2016 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10150/596000 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT ingersollwilliamrobert technologyadvancementinnetworkmarketsandagentbargaining |
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1718187135735955456 |