Planned Obsolescence and the R&D Decision


Volume:Volume 27, No. 3

Issue: Autumn 1996

Pages: pp. 583-595

Authors: Michael Waldman

Title: Planned Obsolescence and the R&D Decision

Abstract: By investing in R&D, a durable-goods monopolist can improve the quality of what it will sell in the future, and in this way reduce the future value of current and past units of output. This article shows that if the firm sells its output, then it faces a time inconsistency problem; i.e., the R&D choice that maximizes current profitability does not maximize overall profitability. The result is that if output is sold rather than rented, then in its R&D decision the monopolist has an incentive to practice a type of planned obsolescence that lowers its own profitability.


JEL Classification

Market Structure, Firm Strategy, and Market Performance: Monopoly
Monopolization Strategies Cartels
Collusion (L120)
Management of Technological Innovation and R&D (O320
Market Structure and Pricing: Monopoly (D420)
Research and Development (6212)
Market Structure: Industrial Organization and Corporate Strategy (6110)
Microeconomics Theory of Firm and Industry under Imperfectly Competitive Market Structures (0226)