Competition when Consumers Value Firm Scope
Nathan H. Miller, EAG 08-07, August 2008
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Abstract:
I model multimarket competition when consumers value firm scope across markets. Such competition is
surprisingly common – consumers in many industries prefer firms that operate in more geographic and/or
product markets. I show that these preferences permit firms of differing scopes to coexist in equilibrium.
Within markets, firms of greater scope have higher prices and market shares. I turn to the commercial
banking industry for the empirical implementation. Structural estimation of the model firmly supports the
assumptions on consumer preferences, and empirical predictions specific to the model hold in the data.
The results suggest that theoretical model is empirically relevant.