Voluntary Disclosure and Personalized Pricing

46 Pages Posted: 31 Dec 2019 Last revised: 13 Mar 2023

See all articles by S. Nageeb Ali

S. Nageeb Ali

Pennsylvania State University

Gregory Lewis

Microsoft Corporation - Microsoft Research New England

Shoshana Vasserman

Stanford Graduate School of Business

Date Written: December 2019

Abstract

Firms have ever increasing access to consumer data, which they use to personalize their advertising and to price discriminate. This raises privacy concerns. Policymakers have argued in response that consumers should be given control over their data, able to choose what to share and when. Since firms learn about a consumer’s preferences both from what they do and do not disclose, the equilibrium implications of consumer control are unclear. We study whether such measures improve consumer welfare in monopolistic and in competitive markets. We find that consumer control can improve consumer welfare relative to both perfect price discrimination and uniform pricing. First, consumers can use disclosure to amplify competitive forces. Second, consumers can disclose information to induce even a monopolist to lower prices. Whether consumer control improves welfare depends on the disclosure technology and market competitiveness. Simple disclosure technologies suffice in competitive markets. When facing a monopolist, a consumer needs partial disclosure possibilities to obtain any welfare gains.

Suggested Citation

Ali, S. Nageeb and Lewis, Gregory and Vasserman, Shoshana, Voluntary Disclosure and Personalized Pricing (December 2019). NBER Working Paper No. w26592, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3511302

S. Nageeb Ali (Contact Author)

Pennsylvania State University ( email )

University Park
State College, PA 16802
United States

Gregory Lewis

Microsoft Corporation - Microsoft Research New England ( email )

One Memorial Drive, 14th Floor
Cambridge, MA 02142
United States

Shoshana Vasserman

Stanford Graduate School of Business ( email )

655 Knight Way
Stanford, CA 94305-5015
United States

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
50
Abstract Views
474
PlumX Metrics