A Direct Utility Model for Asymmetric Complements

Citation
Lee, Sanghak et al., A Direct Utility Model for Asymmetric Complements, Marketing science , 32(3), 2013, pp. 454-470
Journal title
ISSN journal
07322399
Volume
32
Issue
3
Year of publication
2013
Pages
454 - 470
Database
ACNP
SICI code
Abstract
Asymmetric complements refer to goods where one good is more dependent on the other, yet consumers receive enhanced utility from consuming both. Examples include garden hoses and sprinklers, chips and dip, and routine versus personalized services where the former has a broader base for utility generation and the latter is more dependent on the other's presence. Measuring asymmetric effects is difficult when all that is observed are the purchase quantities present in a consumer's market basket. We propose a direct utility model with a latent decision sequence for measuring asymmetric effects that allows us to capture differential responses to cross-category purchases and inventories. Scanner panel data of milk and cereal purchases are used to investigate the presence of asymmetric complementarity, and implications are explored through counterfactual analyses involving cross-price elasticities and spillover effects of merchandising variables.