TY - JOUR
T1 - Choice of transaction channels
T2 - The effects of product characteristics on market evolution
AU - Ba, Sulin
AU - Stallaert, Jan
AU - Whinston, Andrew B.
AU - Zhang, Han
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2005 M.E. Sharpe, Inc
PY - 2005/3
Y1 - 2005/3
N2 - The capabilities of network technologies have facilitated the growth of electronic commerce. Major issues - notably, security and product quality uncertainty - still pose serious challenges to the further adoption of electronic commerce. Traditional market transactions have a long history and well-understood protections for buyers and sellers. In the electronic markets, formal and informal mechanisms such as trusted third parties (TTP) have emerged trying to ensure safe transactions. In this paper, we investigate under what conditions people will stick to the traditional market and face-to-face transactions, and under what conditions electronic transactions will be the convention of the future. Of particular interest is the role of TTPs in facilitating online transactions. Using evolutionary game theory, we present an analytical model of buyer and seller choices and examine which patterns of transactions can be sustained. We further study how the traders' adaptive behavior may influence the outcome of the market evolution. Through this analysis, we demonstrate that the market will show divergence: for commodity products, electronic transactions through TTPs will get established as the convention for market transactions when traders use historical information about other traders' past strategies. For "look and feel" products, the market evolution depends on the initial distribution of the transaction strategies in the population.
AB - The capabilities of network technologies have facilitated the growth of electronic commerce. Major issues - notably, security and product quality uncertainty - still pose serious challenges to the further adoption of electronic commerce. Traditional market transactions have a long history and well-understood protections for buyers and sellers. In the electronic markets, formal and informal mechanisms such as trusted third parties (TTP) have emerged trying to ensure safe transactions. In this paper, we investigate under what conditions people will stick to the traditional market and face-to-face transactions, and under what conditions electronic transactions will be the convention of the future. Of particular interest is the role of TTPs in facilitating online transactions. Using evolutionary game theory, we present an analytical model of buyer and seller choices and examine which patterns of transactions can be sustained. We further study how the traders' adaptive behavior may influence the outcome of the market evolution. Through this analysis, we demonstrate that the market will show divergence: for commodity products, electronic transactions through TTPs will get established as the convention for market transactions when traders use historical information about other traders' past strategies. For "look and feel" products, the market evolution depends on the initial distribution of the transaction strategies in the population.
KW - Electronic commerce
KW - Electronic markets
KW - Evolutionarily stable equilibrium
KW - Evolutionary game theory
KW - Market evolution
KW - Product characteristics
KW - Stochastically stable equilibrium
KW - Transaction channel
KW - Trusted third party
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=21044453774&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/07421222.2005.11045822
U2 - 10.1080/07421222.2005.11045822
DO - 10.1080/07421222.2005.11045822
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:21044453774
SN - 0742-1222
VL - 21
SP - 173
EP - 197
JO - Journal of Management Information Systems
JF - Journal of Management Information Systems
IS - 4
ER -