Abstract

Consumer switching costs reduce the price elasticity of existing customers while increasing competition for new ones, creating an “invest-and-harvest” incentive for firms. This paper examines the effect of this dual pricing incentive on firm behavior in a laboratory experiment both with and without switching costs and the ability to communicate. I find that switching costs reduce the price level for new consumers, while the price level for existing consumers is unaffected and the “harvesting” effect is comparatively muted. Markets with switching costs are more competitive and less tacitly collusive. Moreover, switching costs provide a focal point for price setting in the form of a minimum marginal cost mark-up, which is frequently chosen in tacit market sharing outcomes. The results have implications for antitrust policy.

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