Abstract
In this study we investigate the strategic implications of the widespread business practice of allocating fixed costs on a per unit basis. Although cost allocation has drawn the interest of accountants since the turn of the century, and has interested economists for a somewhat shorter period, marketing scientists do not appear to have studied its implications for pricing strategy. The accounting literature has been focused upon various tactical issues. Amongst them are (a) preparing tax reports, (b) discouraging managers from over-consumption of perquisites [principal-agent theory], and (c) providing a proxy for the opportunity costs of fixed resources (shared across business functions) that are capacity constrained [queuing theory]. The economics literature has examined cost allocation from the perspective of the multi-product firm. For example, Sweeney (1982) has shown that a partially regulated, multi-product firm will “over-allocate” costs to unregulated markets, thereby raising prices in those markets from the level that would obtain in the absence of regulation. Pavia (1995) has shown that the actual allocation of costs will affect aggregate profits. This effect occurs because marginal revenues are set equal to augmented marginal costs (which themselves are influenced by the actual cost allocation). Therefore, it is of some interest that Stigler (1966) has written, in the context of a single product firm, “any allocation of common costs to a product is irrational if it affects the amount produced.”
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© 2015 Academy of Marketing Science
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Ingene, C.A., Lee, E. (2015). Strategic Cost Allocation in Duopolistic Price Competition. In: Sidin, S., Manrai, A. (eds) Proceedings of the 1997 World Marketing Congress. Developments in Marketing Science: Proceedings of the Academy of Marketing Science. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-17320-7_50
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-17320-7_50
Publisher Name: Springer, Cham
Print ISBN: 978-3-319-17319-1
Online ISBN: 978-3-319-17320-7
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