自愿侧写福利会否加强?

Byungwan Koh, Srinivasan Raghunathan, B. Nault
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引用次数: 22

摘要

尽管消费者档案的倡导者鼓吹个性化的好处,但消费者权益团体反对在线市场的档案,因为他们担心隐私和价格歧视。诸如“选择退出”或“选择加入”之类的政策,为消费者提供自愿参与分析的选择,是受欢迎的折衷方案。我们比较了自愿分析和没有分析,并表明自愿分析导致一些违反直觉的结果。不参与分析的消费者和一些参与分析的消费者在自愿分析下的情况更糟。在自愿分析下,社会福利和总消费者剩余都不一定更高;即使自愿分析导致社会福利的增加,它也可能以牺牲消费者剩余为代价。如果卖方不能实行价格歧视,对每个人只收取统一的价格,或者卖方只能根据消费者的参与情况收取不同的价格,则自愿剖析下的消费者总剩余更高,隐私成本的降低对所有消费者和卖方都有积极的影响。然而,当个性化定价成为可能时,仅降低隐私成本就可能降低消费者总剩余。产生这些结果的主要原因是,自愿分析允许卖方识别没有动力参与的高估值消费者,并为他们设定更高的价格(与没有分析相比),同时从参与的低估值消费者的配置信息中受益。然而,积极的隐私成本降低了即使是低估值消费者的参与激励,从而降低了卖家参与价格歧视的能力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Is Voluntary Profiling Welfare Enhancing?
Although consumer profiling advocates tout benefits from personalization, consumer advocacy groups oppose profiling in online markets because of concerns about privacy and price discrimination. Policies such as opt-out or opt-in that provide consumers the option to voluntarily participate in profiling are the favored compromise. We compare voluntary profiling to no profiling and show that voluntary profiling leads to some counterintuitive results. Consumers that do not participate in profiling and some that participate are worse off under voluntary profiling. Neither social welfare nor aggregate consumer surplus is necessarily higher under voluntary profiling; even when voluntary profiling leads to an increase in social welfare, it may come at the expense of consumer surplus. If the seller cannot price discriminate and charge only a uniform price for everyone or the seller can only charge different prices based on the consumer's participation status, then aggregate consumer surplus under voluntary profiling is higher and a reduction in privacy cost has a positive impact on all consumers as well as the seller. However, when personalized pricing is possible, reducing privacy cost alone may reduce aggregate consumer surplus. The primary reason for these results is that voluntary profiling allows the seller to identify high valuation consumers that have no incentive to participate and set a higher price for them (compared to no profiling) while simultaneously benefitting from the profile information of low valuation consumers that participate. However, a positive privacy cost mitigates the participation incentives of even low valuation consumers and hence sellers' ability to engage in price discrimination.
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