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- Title
The social value of information and the competition motive: price versus quantity games.
- Authors
Cornand, Camille; Dos Santos Ferreira, Rodolphe
- Abstract
We propose a unified framework bridging the gap between team and competition issues in price and quantity games, played by producers of either substitutes or complements, when information is imperfect and dispersed. We reconsider the social value of private and public information in this context and compare the outcomes of the two types of games in terms of equilibrium and social welfare. By parting with full cooperation, the competition motive fitted into the payoffs introduces a strategy distortion and, when information is dispersed, an informational distortion, both increasing with the intensity of competition. The former affects the response to the expected value of the fundamental, and the latter translates into an inefficiently low (high) weight on public information under strategic complementarity (substitutability). Contrary to the latter, which vanishes in the absence of the competition motive, the former is eliminated, under strategic complementarity and dispersed information, at some positive strength of the competition motive, decreasing with the information quality. This disparity creates a trade-off between the minimization of each distortion. As to the social value of public information, it is always positive, while that of private information may be negative, again under strategic complementarity, if competition is intense and the quality of private information relatively poor. Finally, it is more profitable to play under strategic substitutability, except possibly for an intermediate range of the intensity of competition if the quality of private information is again relatively poor.
- Subjects
SOCIAL values; SOCIAL stability; SOCIAL services; BEAUTY contests; EXPECTED returns
- Publication
Economic Theory, 2020, Vol 70, Issue 4, p1101
- ISSN
0938-2259
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s00199-019-01179-7