Abstract
Since 1998 an increasing number of European Internet Service Providers (ISP) have been offering Internet access freely. In 2001, the most of ISPs offered free Internet access. Why does a profit maximizing operator adopts this pricing policy? A consumer who wants to surf on the Net needs to buy two services: the access from the ISP and the connection from the Telephone Operator. Since the two services are complementary, the price of one service creates a negative externality on the demand for the other one. One way to remove this externality is by writing a contract in which one of the two operators offers an amount of money to the other one, if the latter fixes his price to zero. In this paper, we show that, under particular conditions on Internet market development, the contractual solution is better than the independent one in which both operators set their prices independently, without taking into account the negative externality effect.
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