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Re-examining the Effects of Switching Costs

 |  May 23, 2013

Posted by D. Daniel Sokol

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    Andrew Rhodes (Oxford) is Re-examining the Effects of Switching Costs

    ABSTRACT: Consumers often incur costs when switching from one product to another. Recently there has been renewed debate within the literature about whether these switching costs lead to higher prices. We build a theoretical model of dynamic competition and solve it analytically for a wide range of switching costs. We provide a simple condition which determines whether switching costs raise or lower long-run prices. We also show that switching costs are more likely to increase prices in the short-run. Finally switching costs redistribute surplus across time, and as such are shown to sometimes increase consumer welfare.