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The Welfare Effects of Metering Ties
by
Nalebuff, Barry
, Elhauge, Einer
in
Capital goods
/ Costs
/ Distribution
/ Income
/ Income distribution
/ Profits
/ Studies
/ United States
/ Valuation
/ Welfare
/ Welfare economics
2017
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Do you wish to request the book?
The Welfare Effects of Metering Ties
by
Nalebuff, Barry
, Elhauge, Einer
in
Capital goods
/ Costs
/ Distribution
/ Income
/ Income distribution
/ Profits
/ Studies
/ United States
/ Valuation
/ Welfare
/ Welfare economics
2017
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Journal Article
The Welfare Effects of Metering Ties
2017
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Overview
Critics of current tying doctrine argue that metering ties can increase consumer welfare and total welfare without increasing output and that they generally increase both welfare measures. Contrary to those claims, we prove that metering ties always lower both consumer welfare and total welfare unless they increase capital good output. We further show that under market conditions we argue are realistic (which include a lognormal distribution of usage rates that are independently distributed from per-usage valuations), metering ties always harm consumer welfare, even when output increases. Whether metering ties raise or lower total welfare depends on the dispersion of desired usage, the cost structure, and the dissipation of profits caused by metering. For realistic cost values, metering ties will reduce total welfare if the dispersion in desired usage of the metered good is below 0.62. (For comparison, 0.74 is the dispersion of income in the United States.) If 5% of metering profits are dissipated, metering will reduce total welfare for all cost levels unless the dispersion in desired usage exceeds 150% of the dispersion of income in the United States
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