Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
476939 European Journal of Operational Research 2011 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

This research applies the discriminating auction to analyze the online B2B exchange market in which a single buyer requests multiple items and several suppliers having equal capacity and asymmetric cost submit bids to compete for buyer demand. In the present model, we examine the impact of asymmetric cost and incomplete information on the participants in the market. Given the complete cost information, each supplier randomizes its price and the lower bound of the price range is determined by the highest marginal cost. In addition, the supplier with a lower marginal cost has a larger considered pricing space but ultimately has a smaller equilibrium one than others with higher marginal costs. When each supplier’s marginal cost is private information, the lowest possible price is determined by the number of suppliers and the buyer’s reservation price. Comparing these two market settings, we find whether IT is beneficial to buyers or suppliers depends on the scale of the bid process and the highest marginal cost. When the number of suppliers and the difference between the highest marginal cost and the buyer’s reservation price are sufficiently large, each supplier can gain a higher profit if the marginal costs are private information. On the contrary, when the highest marginal cost approaches the buyer’s reservation price, complete cost information benefits the suppliers.

► We analyze a single buyer and several suppliers having equal capacity and asymmetric cost. ► We examine the impact of asymmetric cost and incomplete information on the suppliers. ► Given the complete cost information, each supplier randomizes its price. ► The value of IT depends on the scale of the bid process and the highest marginal cost.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Science (General)
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