Advanced Purchasing, Spillovers, Innovative Pricing and Serendipitous Discovery
Gunnar Eliasson ()
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Gunnar Eliasson: Ratio, Postal: The Ratio Institute, P.O. Box 3203, SE-103 64 Stockholm, Sweden
No 119, Ratio Working Papers from The Ratio Institute
Abstract:
Advanced products such as aircraft distinguish themselves by a number of characteristics. Products are complicated and produced under very complicated circumstances, but also have a very long life. The purchase price, therefore, is a small part of total user cost of the product. Product value, hence, increases the more of cost efficient maintenance that has been built into the product and the easier it is to service and modernize. Advanced products also distinguish themselves by featuring the additional collective characteristic of a “cloud of technology spillovers” available to external users in proportion to their competence to commercialize them. While the value of that cloud to society may be greater than that of the product itself the value to the user may be much smaller. The producer, therefore, faces a tricky pricing problem and the value he can capture depends on his ability to charge for the dual product. I discuss joint production of products with rich spillovers in the context of joint customership, i.e. public purchasing of both products and the collective value generated by spillovers. I demonstrate that a win-win situation might exist between the two that improves with the commercial ability of the local economy to capture the value of the spillovers. Industrial participation programs can be made part of a sale to support the receiver competence of local producers to capture the spillover rents. Part of marketing the product, therefore, involves the ability to present a credible case for the economic value to society of the spillovers and to design a method of charging for them (Innovative pricing). A well designed, mutually beneficial contract should make both parties to the trade winners. This latter form of innovative pricing should be particularly attractive for developing countries. The theoretical argument is illustrated with the case of downstream industrial business formation around Swedish Aircraft industry.
Keywords: integrated production; competence blocs; joint customership; receiver competence; spillovers; organizational learning; technology diffusion (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: D23 D24 L15 L23 L62 M13 O31 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 58 pages
Date: 2008-05-12
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-mkt
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:hhs:ratioi:0119
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