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Journal Article
Forthcoming

Granular search, market structure, and wages

Review of Economic Studies
Gregor Jarosch, Jan Sebastian Nimczik, Isaac Sorkin
Subject(s)
Economics, politics and business environment
Keyword(s)
Market Power, Search and Matching, Wages
JEL Code(s)
J31, J42
Journal Article
Forthcoming

It's not literally true, but you get the gist: How nuanced understandings of truth encourage people to condone and spread misinformation

Current Opinion in Psychology 57 (June 2024): 101788
Julia Langdon, Beth-Anne Helgason, Judy Qui, Daniel A. Effron
Subject(s)
Economics, politics and business environment; Ethics and social responsibility; Human resources management/organizational behavior; Management sciences, decision sciences and quantitative methods
Keyword(s)
misinformation, fake news, morality, fuzzy-trace theory, gist, verbatim, partisan politics
Volume
57
Journal Pages
101788
Journal Article
Forthcoming

The value of information design in supply chain management

Management Science
Ozan Candogan, Huseyin Gurkan
Subject(s)
Information technology and systems; Management sciences, decision sciences and quantitative methods; Technology, R&D management
Keyword(s)
information design, supply chain management, newsvendor model, forecast sharing
ISSN (Online)
1526-5501
ISSN (Print)
0025–1909
Journal Article
Forthcoming

Identification and demarcation—A general definition and method to address information technology in European IT security law

Computer Law & Security Review 52 (April): 105927
Nils Brinker
Subject(s)
Information technology and systems; Technology, R&D management
Keyword(s)
information technology, IT security law, cybersecurity, European regulation
Volume
52
Journal Pages
105927
ISSN (Online)
1873-6734
ISSN (Print)
0267-3649
Journal Article
Forthcoming

Hybrid platform model: Monopolistic competition and a dominant firm

The RAND Journal of Economics
Simon P. Anderson, Özlem Bedre-Defolie
Subject(s)
Economics, politics and business environment
Keyword(s)
Trade platform, hybrid business model, antitrust policy, tax policy
JEL Code(s)
D42, L12, L13, L40, H25
We provide a canonical and tractable model of a trade platform enabling buyers and sellers to transact. The platform charges a percentage fee on third-party product sales and decides whether to be "hybrid", like Amazon, by selling its own product. It thereby controls the number of differentiated products (variety) it hosts and their prices. Using the mixed market demand system, we capture interactions between monopolistically competitive sellers and a sizeable platform product. Using long-run aggregative games with free entry, we endogenize seller participation through an aggregate variable manipulated by the platform's fee. We show that a higher quality (or lower cost) of the platform's product increases its market share and the seller fee, and lowers consumer surplus. Banning hybrid mode benefits consumers. The hybrid platform might favor its product and debase third-party products if the own product advantage is sufficiently high. We also provide some tax policy implications.
Journal Article
Forthcoming

Is your machine better than you? You may never know.

Management Science
Subject(s)
Information technology and systems; Management sciences, decision sciences and quantitative methods; Technology, R&D management
Keyword(s)
machine accuracy, decision making, human-in-the-loop, algorithm aversion, dynamic learning
Artificial intelligence systems are increasingly demonstrating their capacity to make better predictions than human experts. Yet, recent studies suggest that professionals sometimes doubt the quality of these systems and overrule machine based prescriptions. This paper explores the extent to which a decision maker (DM) supervising a machine to make high-stake decisions can properly assess whether the machine produces better recommendations. To that end, we study a set-up in which a machine performs repeated decision tasks (e.g., whether to perform a biopsy) under the DM’s supervision. Because stakes are high, the DM primarily focuses on making the best choice for the task at hand. Nonetheless, as the DM observes the correctness of the machine’s prescriptions across tasks, she updates her belief about the machine. However, the DM is subject to a so-called verification bias such that the DM verifies the machine’s correctness and updates her belief accordingly only if she ultimately decides to act on the task. In this set-up, we characterize the evolution of the DM’s belief and overruling decisions over time. We identify situations under which the DM hesitates forever whether the machine is better, i.e., she never fully ignores but regularly overrules it. Moreover, the DM sometimes wrongly believes with positive probability that the machine is better. We fully characterize the conditions under which these learning failures occur and explore how mistrusting the machine affects them. These findings provide a novel explanation for human-machine complementarity and suggest guidelines on the decision to fully adopt or reject a machine.
© 2023, INFORMS
ISSN (Online)
1526-5501
ISSN (Print)
0025–1909
Journal Article
Forthcoming

Closing open innovation

Strategic Management Review
Marcus Holgersson, Martin W. Wallin, Henry Chesbrough, Linus Dahlander
Subject(s)
Strategy and general management; Technology, R&D management
Keyword(s)
alliance termination; disintegration, innovation strategy, open innovation closure, relationship dissolution, tie dissolution
ISSN (Online)
2688-2639
ISSN (Print)
2688-2612
Journal Article
Forthcoming

Tax incidence and tax avoidance

Contemporary Accounting Research
Scott Dyreng, Xu Jiang, Martin Jacob, Maximilian A. Müller
Subject(s)
Finance, accounting and corporate governance
Keyword(s)
Tax avoidance, tax burden, tax incidence
JEL Code(s)
H20, H25
ISSN (Online)
1911-3846
ISSN (Print)
0823-9150
Journal Article
Forthcoming

When you talk, I remain silent: Spillover effects of peers' mandatory disclosures on firms' voluntary disclosures

The Accounting Review
Matthias Breuer, Katharina Hombach, Maximilian A. Müller
Subject(s)
Finance, accounting and corporate governance
Keyword(s)
Mandatory disclosure, voluntary disclosure, information spillovers, crowding-out
JEL Code(s)
M41, M48, G38
We predict and find that regulated firms’ mandatory disclosures crowd out unregulated firms’ voluntary disclosures. Consistent with information spillovers from regulated to unregulated firms, we document that unregulated firms reduce their own disclosures in the presence of regulated firms’ disclosures. We further find that unregulated firms reduce their disclosures more the greater the strength of the regulatory information spillovers. Our findings suggest that a substitutive relationship between regulated and unregulated firms’ disclosures attenuates the effect of disclosure regulation on the market-wide information environment.
Journal Article
Forthcoming

Naivete-based discrimination

The Quarterly Journal of Economics 132 (2): 1019–1054
Paul Heidhues, Botond Kőszegi
Subject(s)
Economics, politics and business environment
Keyword(s)
Sophistication, naivete, first-degree, price, discrimination, third-degree price discrimination, big data, privacy
JEL Code(s)
D21, D49, D69, L19
We initiate the study of naivete-based discrimination, the practice of conditioning offers on external information about consumers’ naivete. Knowing that a consumer is naive increases a monopolistic or competitive firm's willingness to generate inefficiency to exploit the consumer's mistakes, so naivete-based discrimination is not Pareto-improving, can be Pareto-damaging, and often lowers total welfare when classical preference-based discrimination does not. Moreover, the effect on total welfare depends on a hitherto unemphasized market feature: the extent to which the exploitation of naive consumers distorts trade with different types of consumers. If the distortion is homogenous across naive and sophisticated consumers, then under an arguably weak and empirically testable condition, naivete-based discrimination lowers total welfare. In contrast, if the distortion arises only for trades with sophisticated consumers, then perfect naivete-based discrimination maximizes social welfare, although imperfect discrimination often lowers welfare. And if the distortion arises only for trades with naive consumers, then naivete-based discrimination has no effect on welfare. We identify applications for each of these cases. In our primary example, a credit market with present-biased borrowers, firms lend more than socially optimal to increase the amount of interest naive borrowers unexpectedly pay, creating a homogenous distortion. The condition for naivete-based discrimination to lower welfare is then weaker than prudence.
This is an open access article.
Volume
132
Journal Pages
1019–1054

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