Shrouded Attributes, Consumer Myopia, and Information Suppression in Competitive Markets
National Bureau of Economic Research · Massachusetts Institute of Technology · +1 more institution
Abstract
Bayesian consumers infer that hidden add-on prices (e.g., the cost of ink for a printer) are likely to be high prices. If consumers are Bayesian, firms will not shroud information in equilibrium. However, shrouding may occur in an economy with some myopic (or unaware) consumers. Such shrouding creates an inefficiency, which firms may have an incentive to eliminate by educating their competitors' customers. However, if add-ons have close substitutes, a "curse of debiasing" arises, and firms will not be able to profitably debias consumers by unshrouding add-ons. In equilibrium, two kinds of exploitation coexist. Optimizing firms exploit myopic consumers through marketing schemes that shroud highpriced add-ons.…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 56.75
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 68
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Exploit
- Shroud
- Inefficiency
- Incentive
- Business
- Competitor analysis
- Cournot competition
- Industrial organization