Information technology-enabled exchanges have enhanced the viability of a variety of secondary
markets, notably markets for used books. Electronic used book exchanges, in particular, offer a wider selection, lower search costs, and significantly lower prices than physical used bookstores do. The increased viability of these used book markets has caused concern among groups such as the Book Publishers Association and AuthorâÃÂÃÂs Guild who believe that used book markets will significantly cannibalize new book sales.
This proposition, while theoretically possible, is based on speculation as opposed to empirical
evidence. In this research, we use a unique dataset collected from Amazon.comâÃÂÃÂs new and used
marketplaces to estimate the impact of IT-enabled used book markets on new book sales. We use
these data to calculate the impact of these secondary market exchanges on consumer and publisher welfare by calculating the cross-price elasticity of new books sales with respect to used
book prices.
Our analysis suggests that IT-enabled secondary market exchanges increase consumer surplus by
approximately 70millionannually.Further,wefindthatonly15cannibalizenewbookpurchases.Theremaining85loseonly32 million in gross profit annually (about 0.2% of total gross profit) due to the
presence of AmazonâÃÂÃÂs used book markets. Further, the additional used book readership gain
from these electronic markets may mitigate author losses through increased revenue from secondary
sources such as speaking and licensing fees. These surplus changes, combined with the estimated
$64 million the used book market added to AmazonâÃÂÃÂs gross profits, show that IT-enabled used markets for books have a strong positive first-order impact on total welfare.Information Systems Working Papers Serie