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Shrouded attributes, consumer myopia, and information suppression in competitive markets

TLDR
In this paper, the authors show that informational shrouding flourishes even in highly competitive markets, even in markets with costless advertising, and even when the shrouding generates allocational inefficiencies.
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 high-priced add-ons. In turn, sophisticated consumers exploit these marketing schemes. It is not possible to profitably drive away the business of sophisticates. It is also not possible to profitably lure either myopes or sophisticates to nonexploitative firms. We show that informational shrouding flourishes even in highly competitive markets, even in markets with costless advertising, and even when the shrouding generates allocational inefficiencies.

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Social Norms and Energy Conservation

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Why has CEO Pay Increased So Much

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Salience and Taxation: Theory and Evidence

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Investor Inattention and Friday Earnings Announcements

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compare the response to earnings announcements on Friday, when investor inattention is more likely, to the response on other weekdays, and support explanations of post-earnings announcement drift based on underreaction to information caused by limited attention.
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Psychology and Economics: Evidence from the Field

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Good News and Bad News: Representation Theorems and Applications

TL;DR: In this article, a notion of "favorableness" of news is introduced, characterized, and applied to four simple models: the arrival of good news about a firm's prospects always causes its share price to rise, more favorable evidence about an agent's effort leads the principal to pay a larger bonus, buyers expect that any product information withheld by a salesman is unfavorable to his product, and bidders figure that low bids by their competitors signal a low value for the object being sold.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Model of Reference-Dependent Preferences

TL;DR: This article developed a model of reference-dependent preferences and loss aversion where the gain-loss utility is derived from standard consumption utility and the reference point is determined endogenously by the economic environment.
Book

Markets with consumer switching costs

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that the noncooperative equilibrium in an oligopoly with switching costs may be the same as the collusive outcome in an otherwise identical market without switching costs.
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