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Manipulative consumers

Michael Richter and Nikita Roketskiy

No 18756, CEPR Discussion Papers from Centre for Economic Policy Research

Abstract: We study optimal monopoly pricing with evasive consumers. The monopolist uses consumer data to estimate demand and menu pricing to optimally screen the residual uncertainty about consumers' preferences. Third degree price discrimination encourages data-conscious consumers to manipulate their observable attributes (at a cost). This reduces the precision of demand estimation, sometimes rendering the consumer data useless. We derive the monopolist's gains from using data and characterize the optimal investigation strategy. Large number of observable consumer attributes results in small overall value of data. Randomly restricting monopolist's access to consumer data increases profit.

Keywords: Nonlinear; pricing (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2024-01
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