Hedonic Price Indexes for Spreadsheets and an Empirical Test for Network Externalities
The RAND Journal of Economics1994Vol. 25(1), pp. 160–160
Citations Over TimeTop 1% of 1994 papers
Abstract
In this article, I first estimate hedonic price equations for computer spreadsheet programs, and then use the analysis to empirically test whether network externalities exist in this industry. The study shows that consumers are willing to pay a significant premium for spreadsheets that are compatible with the Lotus platform and for spreadsheets that offer links to external databases, and a similar premium for spreadsheets that offer local area network externalities. Finally, the quality-adjusted (real) price of computer spreadsheets declined by approximately 15% per year from 1986 to 1991.