Working paper

The value of personal information in online markets with endogenous privacy

Rodrigo Montes, Wilfried Sand-Zantman, and Tommaso M. Valletti

Abstract

This paper investigates the effects of price discrimination on prices, profits and consumer surplus, when one or more competing firms can use consumers' private information to price discriminate and consumers can pay a privacy cost to avoid it. While a monopolist always benefits from higher privacy costs, this is not true in the competing duopoly case. In this last case, firms' individual profits are decreasing while consumer surplus is increasing in the privacy cost. Finally, under competition, we show that the optimal selling strategy for the owner of consumer data consists in dealing exclusively with one firm in order to create maximal competition between the winner and the loser of data. This brings ineficiencies, and we show that policy makers should concentrate their attention on exclusivity deals rather than making it easier for consumers to protect their privacy.

Keywords

Privacy; Information; Price Discrimination;

Replaced by

Rodrigo Montes, Wilfried Sand-Zantman, and Tommaso M. Valletti, The value of personal information in online markets with endogenous privacy, Management Science, vol. 65, n. 3, March 2019, pp. 955–1453.

Reference

Rodrigo Montes, Wilfried Sand-Zantman, and Tommaso M. Valletti, The value of personal information in online markets with endogenous privacy, TSE Working Paper, n. 15-583, May 2015, revised May 2017.

See also

Published in

TSE Working Paper, n. 15-583, May 2015, revised May 2017