Contents
Citation
| No | Title |
|---|---|
| 1 | Importance of corporate image for domestic brands moderated by consumer ethnocentrism / 2019 / Journal of Product & Brand Management / vol.ahead-of-print, no.ahead-of-print, |
East Asian Economic Review Vol. 16, No. 3, 2012. pp. 249-272.
DOI https://dx.doi.org/10.11644/KIEP.JEAI.2012.16.3.250
Number of citation : 1|
Woong Lee |
Center for Emerging Economies Research Korea Institute for International Economic Policy |
|---|---|
|
Hyung Ju Hong |
Competition Policy Bureau Korea Fair Trade Commission |
This paper examines how a Korean automobile firm price-discriminates between the Korean and the U.S. markets. We argue that a Korean automobile firm’s pricing behavior depends on the differences in price elasticity over the segmented markets between the countries. Our findings are that differences in price elasticity may help explain why a medium-class car’s price is higher in Korea than that in the U.S. while a small-sized car’s price is higher in the U.S. than in Korea, which implies that a Korean automobile firm 3rd degree price-discriminates on the same or similar products between Korea and the U.S. This type of 3rd degree price discrimination differs from a typical home-bias effect (charging higher prices to domestic consumers) because a small-sized car which is produced domestically sells at higher price abroad. This finding can be added as a source that violates the law of one price.
International price discrimination, Law of one price, Pricing to market, Automobile industry
The Press and media often criticize that Hyundai Motors, the firm with approximately 50 percent of the market share in the Korean automobile industry, charges domestic consumers much higher prices with its monopoly power than American consumers.1,2 However, it is not evident because among the cars domestically manufactured by Hyundai Motors, a small-sized car is more expensive in the U.S although a medium-class car sells at higher price in Korea.
For example, Hyundai Motors sold both
The above observations are summarized as the inequalities that
7
These observations can also be summarized as:
These inequalities indicate that the price of a medium-class car is higher in Korea but the price of a small-sized car is higher in the U.S. or relative price of medium-class car is higher than that of small-sized car between Korea and the U.S. We define (1) as “
Price differences for the same or similar goods across countries are not an uncommon phenomenon and international price differences for several traded goods have been extensively studied in economic literature. (e.g. Aw 1993, Gil-Pareja 2002, Haskel and Wolf 2001, Verboven 1996). Most studies have explained international price differences in terms of pricing-to-market (PTM), law of one price (LOOP) or industry-specific restrictions (import quota and tariff) in several countries (e.g. Goldberg [1995], Knetter [1993], Goldberg and Verboven [2001]), but none of these works explains
In this paper, we explore possible sources of
All other sources except differences in relative elasticity do not show the corresponding pattern of 
This finding is consistent with
The rest of the paper is organized as follows. Section 2 provides a brief description of the Korean and the U.S. automobile industries and identification strategy to compare two different markets. Section 3 delineates the sources of
1)Source for the market share: Korea Automobile Manufacturers Association (2005, 2011).
2)There have been many articles on this issue in press and media. An article written in English is shown at
3)Sources for the prices:
4)Difference in options between Korea and the U.S. is also critical issue that causes difference in the prices of cars between the countries. For this, the authors selected the car models with almost the same options in each country in this section.
5)Hyundai started producing Sonata at Hyundai Motor Manufacturing Alabama LLC in Alabama (a State in the U.S.) from May 2005.
6)Exchange rate: $1 = 1044 Korean Won, October 15, 2005 (Bank of Korea Economic Statistics System,
7)
represents price of medium-class cars sold in Korea.
8)See
9)The assumption of the 2nd degree price discrimination in the automobile industry is a common assumption in the literature (see, for example,
It is obvious that the Korean and the U.S. automobile markets are different. Each country’s consumers have different choice of alternatives, different consumer preferences, dissimilar market structures and so on. Table 1 provides a brief summary of the Korean and the U.S. markets in the early 21st century. The number of vehicles sold in the U.S. was sixteen times as many as that in Korea. The number of alternatives available to American consumers was significantly higher than the number to Koreans (102 vs. 255). The Korean market was more monopolistic, being dominated by domestic firms (see
Considering the differences between the countries, our strategy to compare the Korean and the U.S. markets is as follows: first we find similar market classes between the countries. For the classification, we use general market segmentation rules in each country. For example,
In this paper, our main interest is the cars in the group of small-sized (
Lastly, we do not extend the data set to the year 2005 or further. The reason is that Hyundai Motors started manufacturing
10)
11)Daewoo stopped exporting its products to the U.S. in 2003 after being merged with GM. Daewoo was famous for an OEM provider of GM before it produced its own models and later became a subsidy of GM.
12)We use the market classes that are listed in “Korea Automobile Industry” published by Korea Automobile Manufacturers Association (2005) and “Market Data Book” and “Automotive Yearly Data Book” by the
We assume that the market structure of the automobile industry is an oligopoly with Bertrand competition through product differentiation. This assumption is commonly used in the literature (e.g., Bresnahan [1987], Berry [1994], Berry, Levinsohn and Pakes [1995], Verboven [1996], Goldberg and Verboven [2001], Pertin [2002]) and we follow this conventional wisdom. We then analyze the possible sources of price difference that may cause
where
Observing cost differences is hard for economists because of the lack of data on production costs. Further, it is difficult because the relevant cost differences depend not only on production costs but also opportunity costs. Despite these difficulties, we argue that production-cost differences do not explain
If
Opportunity costs may contribute to
Markups can help explain
Markups can be different between Korea and the U.S. depending on the demand elasticities or levels of competition. Other sources can be import restrictions such as import quota, but there was no import quota in the countries during the time of the data set, i.e., from 2000 to 2004.16
First, we compare levels of competition between the countries. Table 4 provides measures of the competition in the car markets. As it was mentioned in Section 2, we focus on the car markets only. The stylized facts of the entire automobile market, the Korean market was more concentrated and domestic-firm dominated, are consistent with the car markets (see
We compare the relative values of market concentration using
The intuition in Equation (5) is that as a market (or a segment of the market) is more competitive (less concentrated), prices tend to be lower. Table 6 presents that the relative
Alternatively, a source of
If (5) is proven, then this can help explain APD between small-sized and medium-class cars. (5) implies that Korean firms exercise price discrimination based on relative elasticities of Koreans with respect to the U.S. consumers such that they charge higher (lower) prices on medium-class (small-sized) cars in Korea because the demand elasticity for the consumers purchasing medium-class (small-sized) car is lower (higher) in Korea than in the U.S. This is typical 3rd price discrimination because the firms charge different prices in different markets for the same or similar products by taking advantage of the different price elasticities across the U.S. and Korean markets. The following sections investigate this issue.
13)For the data set in this paper, all Korean cars sold in the U.S. were produced in Korea (see the
14)Sources: for the U.S.,
15)Sources:
16)Markups can also be different due to collusion among firms, but t it is unlikely because levels of competition were very low in Korea. (See
We adopt a random-coefficients logit model as in Berry, Levinsohn and Pakes (1995) (hereafter referred to as BLP) to derive the demand system of automobile industry. Suppose we have
where
The distribution of consumers’ taste parameters is modeled as follows.
where
Since the consumers can decide not to purchase any of the products, we assume the existence of an outside good,
where the mean utility from the outside good,
Let
By combining equations (7) and (8), we have the final indirect utility equation:
Assuming
We can also obtain the overall market share of product
The price elasticities of the market share of product
The reason we only consider the demand side in the regression analysis is that the focus is the price elasticity of demand. In Bertrand oligopoly model with differentiated products, markups are inversely related to both own-price and cross-price elasticities. Thus once we obtain the estimates for elasticities, then markups can also be inferred. The higher the own-price elasticity, the lower the markup, that is consumers are more sensitive to changes in price. The higher cross-price elasticity, the lower the markup and this means the higher the levels of competition.
17)Following
18)Without the outside good, consumers are forced to purchase one of the inside goods and demand depends only on differences in prices. A general price increase for all products will not decrease the quantities purchased. However, if all prices increase, then some consumers would not buy any product at all. Thus we need the outside good to account for zero consumption.
19)In general, a market share of outside option can be defined as the total market size minus the inside products’ market shares
Our estimation follows Berry (1994), BLP (1995) and Nevo (2000). Given an appropriate set of instruments,
where the weight matrix,
where
The structural error term can also be defined as
For the simple logit model, we can obtain analytical expression for (
Market shares depend on prices and disturbance terms, but prices will also depend on the disturbance terms in Equation (16), which means that prices are correlated with the unobserved product characteristics. Without isolating this correlation, the estimates can be inconsistent. This calls for some instrumental variables for the endogenous prices. Berry’s (1994) suggestion is to use the observed product characteristics (excluding endogenous price) and the averages of the values of the same characteristics of other vehicles offered by that firm as instruments that some variable correlated with price but not with anything else in the demand system as in Equation (16).20
We will use Berry’s idea to construct instrumental variables in the regression analysis.21
20)In 2SLS case, “price” is regressed on the instruments that listed above and the explanatory variables in the first stage. Same logic is applied when a random coefficient logit model is performed.
21)BLP (1995) and
The main data set consists of prices, sales, and some attributes of new vehicles sold in Korea and the U.S., dating from 2000 to 2004 (5 years). The U.S. data are collected from “
The descriptive statistics for the U.S. and Korean automobile markets are provided in Table 7. On average, prices in the U.S. were twice as high as those in Korea. Size (measures as the product of length and width) and height of auto vehicles were larger in the U.S. than those in Korea. The ratio of horse power to weight (HP/Weight, a measure of engine performance) was higher in the U.S. These patterns persist even we decompose the auto vehicles into cars and light trucks except height in cars’ and HP/Weight in light trucks’ cases. Height of cars in Korea was higher than that in the U.S. by approximately 0.5 inch and HP/Weight of light trucks in both countries were almost the same. These exceptions might indicate that American consumers preferred higher light trucks as well as larger size and higher engine performance for cars.
22)In “
23)
24)The number of households for US is easily collected from “
In Table 8, we report the results of OLS and 2SLS, using the instrumental variables discussed in Section 5, in the estimation of demand parameters.25 These results are obtained from the regression of ln(
In Tables 9 and 10, the estimation results from the random-coefficient logit model are reported. The estimates are based on equation (9) and computed using the procedure described in Section 5. Compared to the 2SLS logit case, the marginal (mean) utility of individual product characteristics and price varies across consumers so that we estimate a mean and a variance for each of them. The first columns display the means of the taste parameters,
Table 11 presents the estimated relative values of price elasticities for small and medium class cars sold by Hyundai Motors. First, own price elasticities are calculated from (12) and these estimates are used to compute these relative elasticities. Table 12 shows the five year average of relative elasticities for small and medium classes.
The results in Tables 11 and 12 are consistent with
Hyundai Motors charges different prices on the same or similar products between Korea and the U.S. by taking advantage of relative elasticity differences. This pricing scheme of Hyundai Motors can be seen as a 3rd degree price discrimination across countries with relative elasticity differences and this can be considered as a source of international price differences. Of course, charging higher prices with relative elasticity differences is possible because Korean firms have much stronger market powers over all the segments in Korea (see
25)To check whether estimates for the parameters between the Korean and the U.S. markets, we performed the Chow and the likelihood ratio tests. The estimates between the countries are significantly different at 1% level of significance.
The phenomenon of asymmetric price differential (
Unlike most automobile industry’s studies in economics have focused on the U.S. and European markets, this paper examined the Korean automobile industry. We will do further research with the data collected for Korea. Related to this paper, we will explore why small-sized cars, especially budget size, are much cheaper in Korea than in the U.S. Of course, consumers for small-sized cars are likely to be more sensitive to price changes and outside options, thus prices for these cars are cheaper. This, however, does not fully explain significantly cheaper small-sized cars in Korea than in the U.S. Unlike in the American market, there exist cheaper and smaller cars, extra-small cars, that only sold in Korea. There could be a certain degree of competition between the segments of small-sized and extra-small cars in Korea, which further bring down the prices of small-sized cars in Korea. This research is now underway.
A Korean automobile firm’s price discriminating behavior between Korea and the U.S.
Note:
- The 2nd price discrimination by product differentiation through product differentiation in each country is a common assumption in the literature (e.g.,
- The 3rd price discrimination based on different (relative) elasticities of demand between Korea and the U.S. is the argument tested in this paper.
Characteristics of the Korean and the U.S. Automobile Markets (2000 - 2004)
Sources: Car Life (various issues), Korea Automotive Research Institute (2005,
Notes:
- All variables except import tax are the 5 year (2000 to 2004) averages.
- a
- b the Hirschmann-Herfindahl Index (
- c based on CIF price; d since 1995; e car (2.5%), truck (25%)
- Market shares to compute
Corresponding Market Classes between Korea and the U.S.
Sources: The Korea Automotive Research Institute (2005), the
Car Sales of the selected segments in U.S. by Hyundai Motors
Sources: The
Car Market Concentration (2000-2004)
Notes:
- Car market does not include light trucks (SUVs and minivans).
- Market shares in the parenthesis are price-adjusted.
CR1 and HHI by selected classes for Korea and the U.S. Markets
Note: Unit of CR1 is percentage.
Relative Values of CR1 and HHI
Note:
- Budget and Economy are small-sized and Midrange-lower and Midrange-standard are medium-class cars.
- When relative values are compared, please see 
for example, represents CR1 of medium-class cars in Korea.
Descriptive Statistics (5 year average, 2000-2004)
Notes:
- Standard deviations are given in the parentheses; Prices in Korea are converted into the U.S. dollars using average exchange rate in each year.
- prices are nominal, not PPP adjusted and exchange rates for each year are annual averages taken from Bank of Korea Economic Statistics System,
The Estimates of OLS and 2SLS for the Korea and the US Markets
Notes:
- The dependent variable is
- Number of observations = 455 for Korea and 1019 for the US, respectively.
- Asymptotically robust standard errors are given in parentheses.
- a This variable is
- b Instruments: Size, Height and HP/WT for each vehicle; the average of Sizes of the firm’s other vehicles, the average of Heights of the firm’s other vehicles, and the average of HP/WTs for the firm’s other vehicles.
- For Korea, weak-identification test
- For the U.S., Weak-identification test
The Estimates of Random-Coefficients Logit Model for the Korea Market
Notes:
- Parameters are GMM estimates. Number of observations: 455.
The Estimates of Random-Coefficients Logit Model for the U.S. Market
Note:
- Parameters are GMM estimates. Number of observations: 1,019.
Estimated Relative Elasticities for Hyundai Motors’ cars in the Selected Classes.
Notes:
-
-
- When relative elasticities are compared, please use 
-
for example, represents the elasticity of medium-class cars in Korea.
Average Relative Elasticities of Medium Cars with respect to Small Cars
Note:
- When relative elasticities are compared, please use 
-
for example, represents the elasticity of medium-class cars in Korea.