Publication | Open Access
Multi-product firms at home and away: Cost- versus quality-based competence
191
Citations
47
References
2015
Year
Applied EconomicsMarket DesignIndustrial OrganizationCompetitive AdvantageProduct ManagementMarket AnalysisManagementPerceived QualityEconomic AnalysisMexican DataInternational BusinessEconomicsMulti-product FirmsProduct QualityStrategic ManagementMarketingConsumer-driven Product DevelopmentBusinessImproved Product QualityBusiness StrategyDynamic CompetitionMarket PowerMicroeconomics
We develop a new model of multi-product firms which invest to improve the perceived quality of both their individual products and their brand. Because of flexible manufacturing, products closer to firms' core competence have lower costs, so firms produce more of them, and also have higher incentives to invest in their quality. These two effects have opposite implications for the profile of prices. Mexican data provide robust confirmation of the model's key prediction: firms in differentiated-good sectors exhibit quality-based competence (prices fall with distance from core competence), but export sales of firms in non-differentiated-good sectors exhibit the opposite pattern.
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