It seems that the complement and substitute effect is segmented in music downloads:
First is the differential impact of file-sharing on an artist depending on their existing popularity. According to Blackburn who investigates this issue the ‘bottom’ 3/4 of artists sell more as a consequence of file-sharing while the top 1/4 sell less.So, popular songs and artists get reduced sales because of downloads, while obscure artists get higher sales. This makes sense if you imagine someone hearing a song on the radio (popular) and then downloading it instead of buying the album (substitution) compared to someone who has heard about an artist from a friend (obscure) and then downloads some songs to see if they like them (complementary).
The current music business is built around hits -- this represents a dramatic change in how people consumer music. (Thanks to boing boing and marginal revolution)
No comments:
Post a Comment