b.
Now suppose that the production of each good entails a marginal cost of $30. How
does this information change your answers to (a)? Why is the optimal strategy now
different?
With marginal cost of $30, the optimal prices and profits are:
Price 1
Price 2
Bundled
Price
Profit
Sell Separately
$80.00
$80.00
—
$200.00
Pure Bundling
—
—
$120.00
$240.00
Mixed Bundling
$94.95
$94.95
$120.00
$249.90
Mixed bundling is the best strategy. Since the marginal cost is above the reservation
price of consumer’s A and D, the firm can benefit by using mixed bundling to encourage
them to only buy the one good.
Chapter 11: Pricing with Market Power
181
16. A cable TV company offers, in addition to its basic service, two products: a Sports
Channel (Product 1) and a Movie Channel (Product 2). Subscribers to the basic service
can subscribe to these additional services individually at the monthly prices P
1
and P
2
,
respectively, or they can buy the two as a bundle for the price P
B
, where P
B
< P
1
+ P
2
.
(They can also forego the additional services and simply buy the basic service.) The
company’s marginal cost for these additional services is zero. Through market research,
the cable company has estimated the reservation prices for these two services for a
representative group of consumers in the company’s service area. These reservation
prices are plotted (as x’s) in Figure 11.16, as are the prices P
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