A Theory of B2B Exchange Formation

説明

The recent explosion of attempts to form B2B exchanges and the large failure rate of these attempts raise questions about when and why B2B exchange formation succeeds. Our model provides a theory of B2B exchange formation by investigating conditions under which B2B exchanges attract enough buyers and suppliers to form. Our most important result is that, when the number of potential suppliers is large enough, successful formation of a B2B exchange hinges on its ability to subsidize suppliers selectively. Since there are externalities among participation decisions, charging the marginal cost of connection does not lead to the efficient outcome. Offering a subsidy to a selective group of suppliers is to "divide and conquer" them to induce full participation. Selective subsidy is also necessary to insure that the optimal number of suppliers join the exchange. When such subsidy is feasible, the full participation equilibrium becomes the unique subgame-perfect Nash equilibrium. The theory also yields implications for the ownership structure needed to support B2B exchange formation.

収録刊行物

詳細情報 詳細情報について

  • CRID
    1870302167765541504
  • DOI
    10.2139/ssrn.315121
  • ISSN
    15565068
  • データソース種別
    • OpenAIRE

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