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Nonlinear Pricing

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Title: Nonlinear Pricing


1
Nonlinear Pricing
  • How to use price innovation to increase profits?

2
Linear Prices
  • Suppose you operate a service or sell a good.
  • A customer may purchase a quantity, q.
  • You can charge a price based on that quantity
    I.e., a function, P(q).
  • A linear price has P(q) p

3
Examples of Nonlinear Pricing
  • Regulated Industries
  • Per unit price depends on quantity
  • Taxes depend on income
  • Unregulated Industries
  • Quantity discounts
  • Rebates
  • Take-or-pay contracts
  • Credits towards subsequent purchases

4
Railroads and Transport
  • Railroad tariffs specify charges based on the
    weight, volume, and distance of each shipment.
  • For instance, discounts on the charge per mile
    per hundredweight are offered for full-car
    shipments and for long-distance shipments.
  • In other transport industries such as trucking,
    airlines, and parcel delivery the rates depend
    also on the speed of delivery or the time of the
    day, week, or season.

5
Electricity
  • Electricity tariffs specify energy charges based
    on the total kilo-Watt hours used in the billing
    period, as well as demand charges based on the
    peak power load during the year.
  • Lower rates apply to successive blocks of
    kilo-Watt hours and in some cases the demand
    charges are also divided into blocks.
  • Energy rates for most industrial customers are
    further differentiated by the time of use, as
    between peak and offpeak periods.

6
Telecommunications
  • Telephone companies offer a variety of tariffs
    for measured toll service and WATS lines.
  • Each tariff provides the least-cost service for a
    particular range of traffic volumes.
  • Rates are also differentiated by distance and
    time of use.
  • Mobile phone contracts have a take-or-pay quality.

7
Airlines
  • Airline fares allow frequent flier credits
    toward free tickets based on accumulated mileage.
    The retail value of a free ticket increases
    sharply with the number of miles used to acquire
    it.
  • Further discounts are offered for advance
    purchase, noncancellation, round trip, weekend
    stays, and duration.

8
Rental Agreements
  • Rental rates for durable equipment and space,such
    as vehicles and parking lots, are lower if the
    duration is longer.
  • Rates for rental cars are also differentiated by
    the size of the vehicle and the time of use.

9
Advertising
  • Newspaper and magazine advertising rates are
    based on the size and placement of the insertion,
    the total number of lines of advertising space
    purchased by the customer during the year, and in
    some cases the annual dollar billings.

10
Taxes
  • How should Crown Casino be taxed?

11
Classifying Nonlinear Prices
  • Block-declining or tapered tariffs marginal
    prices decline in successive increments as
    purchases increase.
  • Two-part tariff comprises an initial fixed fee
    and a per-unit price for units purchased.

12
Graphical Representation
Three-Part
Linear
Two-Part
P(q)q
Fixed-Fee
Block
Nonlinear
q
13
Finding the Optimal Price
  • Using linear pricing
  • Cannot be a truth telling mechanism
  • No customer has an incentive to report they are a
    high willingness-to-pay type
  • Outcome pool all customers together! All
    customers treated equally

14
Game Theory
  • What can game theory tell us about the form of
    nonlinear prices?

15
Strategic Consumers
  • Given a nonlinear price schedule, P(q) will
    choose q to maximise their own payoff, u(q)
    P(q)q
  • Firm wants to choose P(q) to maximise its
    profits

16
Possibility of Resale
  • If resale is possible, some consumers may benefit
    from arbitrage
  • E.g., for quantity discounts, consumer may buy a
    large order and sell to non-bulk purchasers
    (long-distance telephone transmission)
  • E.g., increasing schedules, open multiple
    accounts and purchase small amount from each
  • Expensive resale will still constrain tariffs
  • If bulk resale is excluded, can exclude multiple
    accounts by ensuring price schedule is not
    increasing (e.g., P(q1 q2) lt P(q1) P(q2))

17
Exercise
  • Pricing Stephen King over the Internet

18
Revelation Principle
  • Can always find a truth telling mechanism with
    the same outcome
  • A truth telling mechanism will cause customers to
    be separated by their type.
  • Must satisfy constraints
  • Participation wants to purchase a positive
    quantity
  • Incentive Compatibility wants to tell the truth

19
Participation Constraint
  • Consumer is utility function, ui(x) gives
    value for a quantity x. Let ui(0) 0.
  • Participation constraint says that the consumers
    expenditure, P(x)x cannot exceed
    willingness-to-pay.
  • That is, ui(x) P(x)x

20
Incentive Compatibility
  • What per unit price, p, would be required to have
    the consumer purchase x.
  • Maximise ui(x) p.x
  • Same as (inverse) demand function.

21
Two Types
  • High demand (H) customers and low demand (L)
    customers with
  • Condition The single crossing property

22
Truth-telling Mechanism
  • Mechanism if consumer says they are a high-type,
    then let them consume xH for a total expenditure
    of PH otherwise, they can consume xL for total
    expenditure of PL.
  • What does (PH, xH) and (PL, xL) have to be to get
    consumers to tell the truth?

23
Participation
24
Incentive Compatibility
25
Combine and Rearrange
26
Which Constraints will Bind?
  • Suppose that (H-types earn no surplus)
  • Then
  • But this implies
  • Which violates the L-type PC. So we must conclude
    that

27
Which Constraints will Bind?
  • Suppose that (L-types are given a rent)
  • Then, as H-type IC is binding
  • But violates SCP. So it must be that above
    condition not binding and instead that

28
Price Properties
  • Low demand customers earn no surplus (charged
    their WTP)
  • High demand customers earn a surplus and are
    charged a price just sufficient to induce them to
    tell the truth (I.e., purchase xH rather than xL)

29
Profit Maximisation
  • What should the quantities be to induce
    truth-telling?
  • Firms profit is PH c. xH PL c. xL
  • Maximised subject to previous constraints
  • Which gives
  • L-type has (marginal) value that exceeds MC and
    consumes an inefficiently small amount but H-type
    has (marginal) value equal to marginal cost.

30
Graphical Treatment
WTP
PL A PH A B C
B
But H-type prefers L-deal so needs to set PH A
C
A
C
Quantity
xL
xH
31
Incentive to reduce amount to L-type
WTP
PL A PH A C
B
Gains
A
C
Quantity
xL
xH
Loses
32
Optimal Bundles
WTP
PL A PH A C D
B
A
C
D
Quantity
xL
xH
33
Generalisation
  • Intuition if high demand consumer pays a
    marginal price greater than marginal cost, then
    firm could lower price to them by a small amount
    and induce them to buy more. This would be
    profitable since price exceeded marginal cost on
    those sales.
  • Would not affect other sales since they are
    optimised at lower values of consumption.

34
Other Characteristics
  • Quantity is not the only dimension to price in a
    nonlinear fashion
  • Quality versioning
  • Contract conditions can service be interrupted?

35
Summary
  • Nonlinear prices can increase profits and
    efficiency when firms cannot tell customers WTP
  • Strategic customers constrain the form of the
    non-linear price
  • General principle
  • Extract rents from low types
  • Price to high types to encourage truthful
    revelation
  • Can be applied to characteristics other than
    quantity
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