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Journal ArticleDOI

Does the Internet Make Markets More Competitive? Evidence from the Life Insurance Industry

TLDR
In this paper, the authors provide empirical evidence on how Internet comparison shopping sites affected the prices of life insurance in the 1990s, and suggest that the growth of the Internet has reduced term life prices by 8-15 percent.
Abstract
The Internet may significantly reduce search costs by enabling price comparisons on‐line. This paper provides empirical evidence on how Internet comparison shopping sites affected the prices of life insurance in the 1990s. With micro data on individual insurance policies and with individual and policy characteristics controlled for, hedonic‐type regressions show that increases in Internet use significantly reduced the price of term life insurance. Further evidence shows that prices did not fall with rising Internet usage in the period before the sites began, nor for insurance types that were not covered on the sites. The results suggest that the growth of the Internet has reduced term life prices by 8–15 percent. The results also show that the initial introduction of the Internet search sites is initially associated with an increase in price dispersion within demographic groups, but as use spreads, the dispersion falls.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Digital Provide: Information (Technology), Market Performance, and Welfare in the South Indian Fisheries Sector

TL;DR: In this article, mobile phone service was introduced throughout Kerala, a state in India with a large fishing industry, and the adoption of mobile phones by fishermen and wholesalers was associated with a dramatic reduction in price dispersion, the complete elimination of waste, and near-perfect adherence to the Law of One Price.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mobile Phones and Economic Development in Africa

TL;DR: Mobile telephony has brought new possibilities to the continent of sub-Saharan Africa as discussed by the authors, and 60 percent of the population has mobile phone coverage, which is the highest rate in the world.
Journal ArticleDOI

Consumer Surplus in the Digital Economy: Estimating the Value of Increased Product Variety at Online Booksellers

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a framework and empirical estimates that quantify the economic impact of increased product variety made available through electronic markets, and they show that this variety can be a significantly larger source of consumer surplus gains.
Journal ArticleDOI

Search, Obfuscation, and Price Elasticities on the Internet

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine the competition between a group of Internet retailers that operate in an environment where a price search engine plays a dominant role and show that for some products in this environment, the easy price search makes demand tremendously price sensitive.
Journal ArticleDOI

Information from Markets Near and Far: Mobile Phones and Agricultural Markets in Niger

TL;DR: In this paper, the impact of mobile phones on price dispersion across grain markets in Niger was analyzed using novel market and trader-level data, and the authors found that the introduction of mobile phone service between 2001 and 2006 explains a 10 to 16 percent reduction in grain prices.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

The Economics of Information

TL;DR: In this paper, the identification of sellers and the discovery of their prices is described as an example of the role of the search for information in economic life, and the identification and discovery of prices of goods and services is discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reducing buyer search costs: implications for electronic marketplaces

TL;DR: In this paper, the role of buyer search costs in markets with differentiated product offerings is analyzed in the context of an electronic marketplace, and the allocational efficiencies such a reduction can bring to a differentiated market are formalized.
Journal ArticleDOI

Frictionless Commerce? A Comparison of Internet and Conventional Retailers

TL;DR: The authors empirically analyzes the characteristics of the Internet as a channel for two categories of homogeneous products-books and CDs-using a data set of over 8,500 price observations collected over a period of 15 months, comparing pricing behavior at 41 Internet and conventional retail outlets.
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A Model of Sales.