“How Does Income Inequality Affect
Market Outcomes in Vertically Differentiated Markets?” forthcoming in the International Journal of
Industrial Organization. (pdf)
Abstract:
The
distribution of consumer incomes is a key factor in determining the structure
of a vertically differentiated industry when consumer's willingness to pay
depends on her income. This paper computes the Shaked and Sutton (1982) model
for a lognormal distribution of consumer incomes to investigate the effect of
inequality on firms' entry, product quality, and pricing decisions. The main findings
are that greater inequality in consumer incomes leads to the entry of more firms
and results in more intense quality competition among the entrants. More
intense quality competition raises the average quality of products in the market
as firms compete for the shrinking share of higher income consumers. With zero
costs of quality improvements and an upper bound on the top quality or when
costs of quality are fixed and rise sufficiently fast, greater heterogeneity of
consumer incomes also reduces firms' incentives to differentiate their products.
Competition between more similar products tends to reduce their prices. However,
when income inequality is very high, the top quality producer chooses to serve
only the rich segment of the market and charges a higher price. The conclusion
is that income inequality has important implications for the degree of product
differentiation, price level, industry concentration, and consumer welfare.