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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.

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References
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Market Structure and Profitability in Canadian Manufacturing Industry: Some Cross-Section Results

TL;DR: In this article, the authors reported the results of regressing the profitability of a sample of 30 Canadian consumer good industries on various measures of market structure, for 1965, and showed that concentration, product differentiation, growth of demand, scale economies, absolute capital requirements, a regional variable, and foreign competition are important determinants of inter-industry differences in profitability.
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On the use of economic models in antitrust : the Realemon case

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a paper entitled "Prepared for Conference on Antitrust Law and Economics, University of Pennsylvania, November 17-18, 1978" with the theme "Antitrust law and economics".
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Advertising and Market Structure Revisited

TL;DR: A number of papers dealing with the advertisingconcentration controversy have appeared as discussed by the authors, including four papers in a Symposium on Advertising and Concentration, which refine the statistical aspects of relating advertising and concentration measured by share of the market held by (usually) four biggest firms.
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Informative advertising, imperfect targeting and welfare

TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider a particular type of targeting which serves to reach those consumers with a high valuation of the good and show, within a monopolistic framework, that such targeting might lower both consumers surplus and, what is more remarkable, social welfare.