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Banning foreign pharmacies from sponsored search : the online consumer response / Matthew Chesnes, Weijia (Daisy) Dai, Ginger Zhe Jin.
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- Book
- Government document
- Author/Creator:
- Chesnes, Matthew, author.
- Dai, Weijia, author.
- Jin, Ginger Zhe, author.
- Series:
- Working paper (United States. Federal Trade Commission. Bureau of Economics) ; no. 321.
- Working paper ; no. 321
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Internet pharmacies--Econometric models.
- Internet pharmacies.
- Advertising--Drugs--Econometric models.
- Advertising.
- Drugs--United States--Safety measures--Econometric models.
- Drugs.
- Consumer protection--United States--Econometric models.
- Consumer protection.
- Internet searching.
- United States.
- Genre:
- Online resources.
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (46 pages) : color illustrations
- Place of Publication:
- Washington, DC : Bureau of Economics, Federal Trade Commission, 2014.
- Summary:
- Increased competition from the internet has raised concerns about the quality of prescription drugs sold online. Given the pressure from the Department of Justice, Google agreed to ban pharmacies not certified by the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy (NABP) from sponsored search listings. Using comScore click-through data originated from health-related queries, we study how the ban affects consumer search and click behavior in a difference-in-differences framework using the synthetic control method. We find that non-NABP-certified pharmacies receive fewer clicks after the ban and this effect is heterogeneous. In particular, pharmacies not certified by the NABP, but certified by other sources (other-certified websites), experience an increase in organic clicks that partially offsets the loss in paid clicks after the ban. In contrast, pharmacies not certified by any certification agencies experience much lower rates of substitution in organic clicks. These results suggest that the ban has increased the search cost for other-certified websites, but at least some consumers overcome the search cost by switching from sponsored to organic links. The lower substitution for uncertified websites may be explained by the rising consumer concerns about the quality of drugs sold on uncertified websites after the ban.
- Notes:
- Online resource; title from PDF title page (FTC, viewed February 15, 2017).
- "April 2014."
- "April 16, 2014"--Page 1
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 26-28).
- OCLC:
- 979563497
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