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E-grāmata: eCommerce Economics

(Baylor University, USA)
  • Formāts: 496 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 18-Mar-2011
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781136821813
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  • Formāts: 496 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 18-Mar-2011
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781136821813
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This second edition of E-Commerce Economics addresses the economic issues associated with using computer-mediated electronic networks, such as the Internet, as mechanisms for transferring ownership of or rights to use goods and services. After studying this book, students will recognize problems that arise in the electronic marketplace, such as how to gauge the competitive environment, what products to offer, how to market those products, and how to price those products. They also will understand the conceptual tools required to evaluate the proper scope of public policies relating to electronic commerce.

Core topics covered in the book include the underpinning of electronic commerce and the application of basic economic principles, including the theories of perfect and imperfect competition, to the electronic marketplace. Building on this foundation, the book discusses virtual products, network industries, and business strategies and conduct. Additional key topics include Internet advertising, intellectual property rights in a digital environment, regulatory issues in electronic markets, public sector issues, online banking and finance, digital cash, international electronic trade, and the implications of e-commerce for aggregate economic activity.

There are several topics new to this edition. These include expanded coverage of e-commerce intermediaries, product compatibility and network standards, bundling of information goods and related antitrust issues, the implications of the Internet for telecommunications, two--sided markets, digital privacy issues, net neutrality, online consumer communities, and the growth of open source software.
List of illustrations xi
Preface to the second edition xv
Unit I Electronic Commerce, markets And Prices 1(122)
1 Foundations Of Electronic Commerce
3(28)
Fundamental issues
3(1)
Objectives of this book and how they relate to you
4(2)
What is electronic commerce?
6(4)
How it works, the evolving infrastructure of e-commerce
10(9)
Who is online, and where are they?
19(3)
Just how important is electronic commerce?
22(5)
Chapter summary
27(1)
Questions and problems
28(1)
Online application
29(1)
Selected references and further reading
30(1)
2 Applying Basic Economic Principles To Electronic Commerce
31(30)
Fundamental issues
31(1)
Production and costs for an Internet seller
32(5)
The electronic marketplace: a competitive paradise?
37(8)
In search of scale and scope economies on the net
45(4)
Playing monopoly, or trying, first movers as dominant firms
49(8)
Chapter summary
57(1)
Questions and problems
58(1)
Online application
59(1)
Selected references and further reading
60(1)
3 Imperfect Competition, Virtual Products, And Network Industries
61(33)
Fundamental issues
61(1)
E-commerce with imperfect competition, oligopoly and monopolistic competition on the Web
62(7)
The economics of virtual products
69(5)
Network externalities
74(5)
Network industries and electronic commerce
79(9)
Chapter summary
88(1)
Questions and problems
89(3)
Online application
92(1)
Selected references and further reading
92(2)
4 Business Strategies And Conduct In The Electronic Marketplace
94(29)
Fundamental issues
94(1)
Price discrimination, some basics
95(8)
Other methods of price discrimination
103(3)
Strategic pricing in e-commerce
106(5)
Vertical integration and vertical restraints on and off the Web
111(8)
Chapter summary
119(1)
Questions and problems
120(1)
Online application
121(1)
Selected references and further reading
122(1)
Unit II Information, Advertising, And Innovation In The Electronic Marketplace 123(124)
5 Searching For Information In Electronic Markets
125(30)
Fundamental issues
125(1)
Imperfect information about product quality
126(5)
Quality signaling and product information
131(6)
Consumer decision-making with incomplete information about quality and prices
137(7)
Price comparisons and market efficiency
144(7)
Chapter summary
151(1)
Questions and problems
152(1)
Online application
153(1)
Selected references and further reading
154(1)
6 E-Commerce Intermediaries And Two-Sided Markets
155(29)
Fundamental issues
155(1)
E-commerce intermediaries
156(3)
Two-sided markets
159(5)
Platforms and two-sided pricing structures
164(4)
Network externalities and two-sided pricing strategies
168(8)
Competing platforms and multihoming
176(4)
Chapter summary
180(1)
Questions and problems
181(1)
Online application
182(1)
Selected references and further reading
182(2)
7 Internet Advertising
184(32)
Fundamental issues
184(1)
E-commerce as a marketing revolution
185(8)
Marketing search, experience, and credence goods on the Web
193(8)
Can Internet sellers do too much advertising?
201(4)
Some legal limits, but do they have intended effects?
205(6)
Chapter summary
211(1)
Questions and problems
212(2)
Online application
214(1)
Selected references and further reading
215(1)
8 Innovation, Intellectual Property Rights, And The Internet
216(31)
Fundamental issues
216(1)
Invention and innovation
217(3)
Firm size, market structure, and innovation
220(3)
Intellectual property, patents, and e-commerce processes
223(7)
Copyrights, trademarks, and digital products
230(11)
Chapter summary
241(2)
Questions and problems
243(1)
Online application
244(1)
Selected references and further reading
245(2)
Unit III Policy Implications Of Electronic Commerce 247(102)
9 Public Policy Issues In Electronic Markets
249(34)
Fundamental issues
249(1)
The economics of consumer protection in electronic commerce
250(5)
Privacy and electronic commerce
255(4)
Market power and antitrust policy in the electronic marketplace
259(8)
Current issues in e-commerce antitrust enforcement
267(7)
Protecting e-commerce security, Web crime and cybercops
274(3)
Chapter summary
277(1)
Questions and problems
278(2)
Online application
280(1)
Selected references and further reading
280(3)
10 Internet Regulation And Net Neutrality
283(33)
Fundamental issues
283(1)
The digital revolution meets social and economic regulation
284(2)
Theories of industry regulation
286(5)
Digital technology confronts telecommunications regulation
291(4)
Regulating the Internet: Net neutrality
295(9)
Who would net neutrality protect?
304(6)
Chapter summary
310(1)
Questions and problems
311(2)
Online application
313(1)
Selected references and further reading
314(2)
11 The Public Sector And The Electronic Marketplace
316(33)
Fundamental issues
316(1)
The great tax debate
317(3)
Can governments get by without taxing e-commerce?
320(8)
Who bears an e-commerce tax burden?
328(4)
Can e-commerce get by if it is taxed?
332(3)
Electronic commerce: a public good?
335(5)
Online communities, free riding, and congestion
340(3)
Chapter summary
343(2)
Questions and problems
345(1)
Online application
346(1)
Selected references and further reading
347(2)
Unit IV Internet Trade, Electronic Money And Banking, And The Economy 349(97)
12 Electronic Commerce And The World Trading System
351(31)
Fundamental issues
351(1)
Absolute advantage and international trade
352(8)
Comparative advantage, international trade, and electronic commerce
360(9)
Intra-industry trade and the globalization of electronic commerce
369(4)
Regulating international trade in the electronic marketplace
373(5)
Chapter summary
378(1)
Questions and problems
379(1)
Online application
380(1)
Selected references and further reading
381(1)
13 The Economics Of Online Banking And Finance
382(29)
Fundamental issues
382(1)
Automated securities trading
383(7)
Web trading of foreign exchange and derivative securities
390(3)
Financial regulation and Internet trading
393(2)
Online banking
395(3)
Can Internet banks go it alone?
398(2)
Regulating online banking
400(6)
Chapter summary
406(2)
Questions and problems
408(1)
Online application
409(1)
Selected references and further reading
409(2)
14 Digital Money And Aggregate Economic Activity
411(35)
Fundamental issues
411(1)
Digital money
412(12)
Monetary policy with bank-issued digital money
424(9)
Electronic commerce, economic activity, and inflation
433(9)
Chapter summary
442(1)
Questions and problems
443(1)
Online application
444(1)
Selected references and further reading
445(1)
Glossary 446(14)
Index 460
David VanHoose is Professor of Economics at the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University, Texas, USA. He was previously Editor for Monetary Economics with the Journal of Economics and Business and the author of textbooks in macroeconomics, money, banking and financial markets, and international economics.