Aaron Schiff
aschiff 26 at gmail dot com

The “waterbed” effect and price regulation

Schiff, A. (2008). The ‘waterbed’ effect and price regulation, Review of Network Economics, 7: 392-414.

This paper investigates conditions that generate the so-called “waterbed” effect under price regulation. This is the effect whereby regulation of one price of a multiproduct firm causes one or more of its unregulated prices to change as a result of the firm’s profit-maximizing behavior. A waterbed effect is shown to arise when demands and/or marginal costs are interdependent, firms use nonlinear pricing, or there is a zero-profit constraint or global price cap. Some implications for market definition, welfare analysis of regulation, non-price competition, collusion and two-sided markets are also discussed, as well as specific applications to fixed-to-mobile termination and bank overcharges.

March 8th, 2010 in Research Papers
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