Market structure and quality determination for complementary products: Alliances and service quality in the airline industry

•Little research exists on the effect of market structure on the provision of complementary goods.•Existing work says joint provision could raise or lower quality of such goods relative to independent provision.•Paper studies this question in the airline industry, focusing on the effect of alliances...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inInternational journal of industrial organization Vol. 68; p. 102557
Main Authors Brueckner, Jan K., Flores-Fillol, Ricardo
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier B.V 01.01.2020
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Summary:•Little research exists on the effect of market structure on the provision of complementary goods.•Existing work says joint provision could raise or lower quality of such goods relative to independent provision.•Paper studies this question in the airline industry, focusing on the effect of alliances on flight frequency (a quality measure).•The answer depends on passenger attitudes toward layover time. This paper explores the effect of market structure on quality determination for complementary products. The focus is on the airline industry and the effect of airline alliances on flight frequency, an important element of service quality. With zero layover cost, the choice of flight frequencies has the same double-marginalization structure as in the usual alliance model, leading to a higher frequency in the alliance case as double marginalization is eliminated, along with a lower full trip price and higher traffic. The surprising result of the paper emerges with high-cost layover time, where double marginalization in frequencies is absent and where an alliance reduces service quality via a lower frequency, with the full price potentially rising (in which case traffic falls).
ISSN:0167-7187
DOI:10.1016/j.ijindorg.2019.102557