1 / 25

Screening, Signaling and Voluntary Disclosure

Screening, Signaling and Voluntary Disclosure. Screening and Signaling. Definitions: Screening- An attempt by an uninformed party to sort individuals according to their characteristics.

raoul
Télécharger la présentation

Screening, Signaling and Voluntary Disclosure

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Screening, Signaling and Voluntary Disclosure

  2. Screening and Signaling • Definitions: Screening- An attempt by an uninformed party to sort individuals according to their characteristics. Signaling- An attempt by an informed party to send an observable indicator of his or her hidden characteristics to an uniformed party.

  3. Examples of Screening • Screening to enable price discrimination (coupons, rebates, outlet malls,…) • Screening to sort different types of workers. • Choice of deductibles associated with different types of insurance. • Obtaining a physical to obtain a favorable life insurance policy.

  4. Examples of Signaling • Obtaining an advanced degree such as an MBA or PhD. • Seller offering a warranty. • Labor contract negotiations/ Negotiating a compensation package.

  5. Example 1: Signaling with a Warranty • Suppose there are sellers of lemons and sellers of peaches and buyers cannot tell a lemon from a peach (like the adverse selection example we did). Suppose a seller can obtain a price of $2,000 if he has a lemon and the buyer knows it’s a lemon and a price of $3,000 if he has a peach and the buyer knows it’s a peach. Finally, assume all sellers can credibly offer a warranty.

  6. Example 1: Signaling with a Warranty • Let the probability of a lemon breaking down be .70 and the probability of a peach breaking down be .10. Suppose the warranty states that if the car breaks down, the seller will pay the buyer $1,500 to repair the car.

  7. Example 1: Signaling with a Warranty • Will the seller with a lemon offer the warranty? Marginal Benefit (MB) from offering the warranty is $1,000. Marginal Cost (MC) from offering the warranty is .7*1500=$1,050. • Will the seller with a peach offer the warranty? Marginal Benefit (MB) from offering the warranty is $1,000. Marginal Cost (MC) from offering the warranty is .1*1500=$150. MB<MC for seller with lemon and MB>MC for seller with peach. Therefore, seller with peach can credibly signal to buyer that the car is a peach by offering the above warranty.

  8. Example 2: Signaling in National Football League Contract Negotiations Guaranteed • Representative Contract Non-Guaranteed

  9. Signaling in NFL Negotiations Review of Economic and Statistics (2003) Michael Conlin and Patrick Emerson

  10. Proportion that “Make Team” and Mean Number of Starts

  11. Proportion that “Make Team” and Mean Number of Starts

  12. Voluntary Disclosure Not Covered in Textbook

  13. You’re on a job interview and the interviewer knows what the distribution of GPAs are for MBA students at MSU: Expected/Average grade for everyone: .2*2.5+.3*3.0+.3*3.5+.2*4.0 = 3.25 Geoff Humphrys at the Lear Center advises anyone who has a 3.5 GPA or higher to volunteer their GPA. Is this a stable outcome?

  14. Students remaining Original share • What does the potential employer believe about the people who stay quiet? • They know their GPA is below a 3.5, but how far below? • Guess the average grade of everyone who didn’t get at least a 3.5. • What is that? .3/.5 .2/.5 =.4 =.6 .4*2.5 + .6*3.0 = 2.8 People with 3.0s will reveal themselves because they don’t want employer to assume they have a 2.8

  15. Voluntary disclosure • Full disclosure principle - if some individuals stand to benefits by revealing a favorable trait, others will be forced to disclose their less favorable values. • If disclosure is costless, only the lowest types will not reveal their quality

  16. Voluntary Disclosure and Signaling • Voluntary Disclosure differs from Signaling because we are assuming that the cost of lying (i.e., saying you have a GPA of 4.0 when you have a GPA of 3.5) is so large than no one does it. Therefore, the decision is to either reveal your private information truthfully or don’t reveal.

  17. Voluntary Disclosure • If it is true that only the lowest types don’t reveal and that consumers/employers (the uninformed party) can infer they are the lowest type, then government should not have to intervene in the market – for example, they should not require firms producing salad dressings to report the fat content and they should not require restaurants to report their hygiene score.

  18. Fat content in Salad Dressing The Impact of Mandatory Disclosure Laws On Product Choice Alan Mathios http://www.jstor.org/view/00222186/ap020088/02a00130/0

  19. Hygiene Scores for LA Restaurants The Effect of Information on Product Quality By Phil Leslie and Ginger Jin http://www.mitpressjournals.org/doi/pdfplus/10.1162/003355303321675428?cookieSet=1

  20. Shipping Charges in Online Auction Platforms Shrouded Attributes and Information Suppression: Evidence from the Field (e-Bay and on-line auction platforms in Taiwan and Ireland) By Jennifer Brown, Tanjim Hossain and John Morgan (QJE 2010)

  21. Film Studios Withholding Movies from Critics To Review or Not to Review? Limited Strategic Thinking at the Movie Box Office By Alexander Brown, Colin Camerer and Dan Lovallo (AEJ: Micro 2012)

  22. Inference of SAT score in College Admissions By Michael Conlin and Stacy Dickert-Conlin

  23. Why would Colleges go to Optional SAT Policy? • Attract a different type of student (those that don’t test well but do well in college) • Maybe more diverse? • Improve ratings • Average SAT score included in U.S. News and World Report • If don’t have SAT scores for lowest score students, reported average increases.

  24. U.S. News and World Report

  25. Strategic Behavior of Colleges By Michael Conlin, Stacy Dickert-Conlin and Gabrielle Chapman Journal of Economic Behavior and Organizations (2013)

More Related