Article

News Aggregators and Competition Among Newspapers on the Internet

Nikrooz Nasr Esfahani, and Doh-Shin Jeon

Abstract

This paper studies how news aggregators affect the quality choices of newspapers competing on the Internet. To provide a micro-foundation for the role of the aggregator, we build a model of multiple issues where newspapers choose their quality on each issue. Our model captures well the main trade-off between the "business-stealing" effect and the "readership-expansion" effect. We find that the aggregator increases the quality only if the readership-expansion effect is large enough relative to the business-stealing effect. Using a condition obtained from empirical results, we find that the aggregator increases the quality and social welfare, but affects newspapers' profits ambiguously.

JEL codes

  • D21: Firm Behavior: Theory
  • D43: Oligopoly and Other Forms of Market Imperfection
  • L13: Oligopoly and Other Imperfect Markets
  • L82: Entertainment • Media

Replaces

Nikrooz Nasr Esfahani, and Doh-Shin Jeon, News Aggregators and Competition Among Newspapers on the Internet, TSE Working Paper, n. 13-388, April 1, 2013, revised July 16, 2014.

Reference

Nikrooz Nasr Esfahani, and Doh-Shin Jeon, News Aggregators and Competition Among Newspapers on the Internet, American Economic Journal: Microeconomics, vol. 8, n. 4, October 2016, pp. 91–114.

See also

Published in

American Economic Journal: Microeconomics, vol. 8, n. 4, October 2016, pp. 91–114