Nonparametric Estimation Of Search Costs For Differentiated Products: Evidence From Medigap

JOURNAL OF BUSINESS & ECONOMIC STATISTICS(2020)

Cited 9|Views16
No score
Abstract
This article develops a method to estimate search frictions as well as preference parameters in differentiated product markets. Search costs are nonparametrically identified, which means our method can be used to estimate search costs in differentiated product markets that lack a suitable search cost shifter. We apply our model to the U.S. Medigap insurance market. We find that search costs are substantial: the estimated median cost of searching for an insurer is $30. Using the estimated parameters we find that eliminating search costs could result in price decreases of as much as $71 (or 4.7%), along with increases in average consumer welfare of up to $374.
More
Translated text
Key words
Consumer search, Health insurance, Price dispersion, Product differentiation
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined