YALE DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS
WORKING PAPER NO. 22

ONE-WAY ESSENTIAL COMPLEMENTS
M. Keith Chen and Barry Nalebuff
November 2006
While competition between firms producing substitutes is well
understood, less is known about rivalry between complementors. We study the interaction
between firms in markets with one-way essential complements. One good is essential to the
use of the other but not vice versa, as arises with an operating system and applications.
Our interest is in the division of surplus between the two goods and the related incentive
for firms to create complements to an essential good.
Formally, we study a two-good model where consumers value A alone, but can only
enjoy B if they also purchase A. When one firm sells A and another sells B,
the firm that sells B earns a majority of the value it creates. However, if the A firm
were to buy the B firm, it would optimaly charge zero for B, provided
marginal costs are zero and the average value of B is small relative to A.
Hence, absent strong antitrust or intellectual property protections, the A firm
can leverage its monopoly into B costlessly by producing a competing version of B
and giving it away. For example, Microsoft provided Internet Explorer as a free substitute
for Netscape; in our model, this maximizes Microsofts joint monopoly profits.
Furthermore, Microsoft has no incentive to raise prices, even if al browser competition
exits. This may seem surprising since it runs counter to the traditional gains from price
discrimination and versioning. We also show that an essential monopolist has no incentive
to degrade rival complementary products, which suggests that a monopoly internet service
provider will offer net neutrality.
There are other means for the essential A monopolist to capture surplus from B.
We consider the incentive to add a surcharge (or subsidy) to the price of B, or
to act as a Stackelberg leader. We find a small gain from pricing first, but much greater
profits from adding a surcharge to the price of B. The potential for A
to capture Bs surplus highlights the challenges facing a firm whose product
depends on an essential good.
Keywords: Bundling, Complements, Monopoly leverage, Net neutrality, Price
discrimination, Tying, Versioning
JEL Classifications: C7, D42, D43, K21, L11, L12, L13, L41, M21 |