Live fast, die young? Investigating product life spans and obsolescence in an agent-based model
Authored by Eric Brouillat
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1007/s00191-014-0385-1
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Platforms:
LSD (Laboratory for Simulation Development)
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
This article presents an agent-based simulation model that explores the
dynamics of product life spans. The objective of this modeling exercise
is to investigate the interplay between technological change and product
life span in extended industrial dynamics. Change in product
characteristics is driven by an endogenous stochastic process relying on
the interplays between heterogeneous consumers and firms. Special
attention is paid to demand-side modeling, which allows analyzing more
thoroughly how decisions of bounded rational consumers affect the
dynamics of the system. Although most existing models on product life
span investigate durable goods monopolists, our study highlights the
notion that diversity matters. Diversity of supply and demand in a
bounded rationality context can push firms to market products with
longer life spans, but their diffusion is restrained by the sensitivity
of consumers to product obsolescence and their willingness to pay for
longer-lasting products. The dynamics of consumer preferences influenced
by firm marketing activities tend to maintain this situation which
contributes to locking the market into short product-life trends.
Unlocking the system requires changes in consumer behavior and better
information about product life span and cost per use for consumers.
Tags
Simulation-model
Markets
Choice
Consumption
Compatibility
Durable-goods
Planned obsolescence
Responsibility instruments
Monopoly
Replacement