scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessPosted ContentDOI

The economic analysis of advertising

Kyle Bagwell
- 01 Jan 2005 - 
- Vol. 3, pp 1701-1844
TLDR
A comprehensive survey of the economic analysis of advertising can be found in this article, with a focus on positive and normative theories of monopoly advertising, price and non-price advertising, theories of advertising and product quality, and theories that explore the potential role for advertising in deterring entry.
Abstract
This chapter offers a comprehensive survey of the economic analysis of advertising. A first objective is to organize the literature in a manner that clarifies what is known. A second objective is to clarify how this knowledge has been obtained. The chapter begins with a discussion of the key initial writings that are associated with the persuasive, informative and complementary views of advertising. Next, work that characterizes empirical regularities between advertising and other variables is considered. Much of this work is conducted at the inter-industry level but important industry studies are also discussed. The chapter then offers several sections that summarize formal economic theories of advertising. In particular, respective sections are devoted to positive and normative theories of monopoly advertising, theories of price and non-price advertising, theories of advertising and product quality, and theories that explore the potential role for advertising in deterring entry. At this point, the chapter considers the empirical support for the formal economic theories of advertising. A summary is provided of empirical work that evaluates the predictions of recent theories of advertising, including work that specifies and estimates explicitly structural models of firm and consumer conduct. This work is characterized by the use of industry (or brand) and even household-level data. The chapter then considers work on endogenous and exogenous sunk cost industries. At a methodological level, this work is integrative in nature: it develops new theory that delivers a few robust predictions, and it then explores the empirical relevance of these predictions at both inter-industry and industry levels. Finally, the chapter considers new directions and other topics. Here, recent work on advertising and media markets is discussed, and research on behavioral economics and neuroeconomics is also featured. A final section offers some concluding thoughts.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Posted Content

The Impact of Corporate Social Responsibility on Firm Value: The Role of Customer Awareness

TL;DR: It is shown that corporate social responsibility (CSR) and firm value are positively related for firms with high customer awareness, as proxied by advertising expenditures, and this evidence is consistent with the view that CSR activities can add value to the firm but only under certain conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Shrouded attributes, consumer myopia, and information suppression in competitive markets

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that informational shrouding flourishes even in highly competitive markets, even in markets with costless advertising, and even when the shrouding generates allocational inefficiencies.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Impact of Corporate Social Responsibility on Firm Value: The Role of Customer Awareness

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that corporate social responsibility and firm value are positively related for firms with high customer awareness, as proxied by advertising expenditures, and that the effect of awareness on the CSR-value relation is reversed for companies with a poor prior reputation as corporate citizens.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

No Pain, No Gain: A Critical Review of the Literature on Signaling Unobservable Product Quality:

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the ways a firm may signal the unobservable quality of its products through several marketing-mix variables, and develop a typology that classifies signals and discuss the available empirical evidence on the signaling properties of several marketing variables.
Posted Content

Industrial Market Structure and Economic Performance

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide a systematic presentation of the economic field of industrial organization, which is concerned with how productive activities are brought into harmony with the demand for goods and services through an organizing mechanism, such as a free market, and how variations and imperfections in the organizing mechanism affect the successful satisfying of an economy's wants.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chicken and egg: competition among intermediation service providers

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyze a model of imperfect price competition between intermediation service providers, and analyze in detail the pricing and business strategies followed by intermediation services providers, showing that efficient market structures emerge in equilibrium, as well as some specific form of inefficient structures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Measuring Market Power in the Ready-to-Eat Cereal Industry

TL;DR: The authors empirically examined the ready-to-eat cereal industry and concluded that the prices in the industry are consistent with noncollusive pricing behavior, despite the high price-cost margins.
Book

A logit model of brand choice calibrated on scanner data

TL;DR: A multinomial logit model of brand choice, calibrated on 32 weeks of purchases of regular ground coffee by 100 households, shows high statistical significance for the explanatory variables of brand loyalty, size loyalty, presence/absence of store promotion, regular shelf price and promotional price cut as discussed by the authors.