Strategic Disclosure of Valuable Information within Competitive Environments

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Other Version

This paper is also available on SSRN and RePEc.

External File or Record

Can’t use the file because of accessibility barriers? Contact us

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Center for Applied Economics and Policy Research

Abstract

Can valuable information be disclosed intentionally by the informed agent even within a competitive environment? In this article, we bring our interest into the asymmetry in reward and penalty in the payoff structure and explore its effects on the strategic disclosure of valuable information. According to our results, the asymmetry in reward and penalty is a necessary condition for the disclosure of valuable information. This asymmetry also decides which quality of information is revealed for which incentive; if the penalty is larger than the reward or the reward is weakly larger than the penalty, there exists an equilibrium in which only a low quality type of information is revealed, in order to induce imitation. On the other hand, if the reward is sufficiently larger than the penalty, there exist equilibria in which either all types or only high quality type of information is revealed, in order to induce deviation. The evaluation of the equilibrium in terms of expected payoff yields that the equilibrium where valuable information is disclosed strategically dominates the equilibrium where it is concealed.

Series and Number:

CAEPR Working Papers
2008-022

EducationalLevel:

Is Based On:

Target Name:

Teaches:

Table of Contents

Description

Citation

Journal

DOI

Rights

This work may be protected by copyright unless otherwise stated.