Network Goods, Information and Identification: Complementarities and Strategic Behavior

The notion of complementarity is fundamental to economics, as reflected in the large and growing number of studies that invoke alternate conceptions of this idea. Though complementarity has been studied for many years, its connection with theory of supermodularity is far more recent. Taking advantag...

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Main Author: Lazzati, Natalia
Other Authors: Amir, Rabah
Language:en
Published: The University of Arizona. 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/145399
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1453992015-10-23T04:27:00Z Network Goods, Information and Identification: Complementarities and Strategic Behavior Lazzati, Natalia Amir, Rabah Amir, Rabah Hirano, Keisuke Reynolds, Stanley S. Walker, Mark Wooders, John C. Identification Information Network goods Supermodularity The notion of complementarity is fundamental to economics, as reflected in the large and growing number of studies that invoke alternate conceptions of this idea. Though complementarity has been studied for many years, its connection with theory of supermodularity is far more recent. Taking advantage of these techniques, the first three chapters of this dissertation study aspects of interest in network markets; endogenous information acquisition; and some insights into the comparison of player's equilibrium strategies. The last chapter applies this methodology to econometric identification.Chapter one provides a thorough analysis of oligopolistic markets with positive demand-side network externalities and perfect compatibility. With a general complementarity structure on the model primitives allowing for products with low or high stand-alone values, a nontrivial fulfilled-expectations equilibrium exists. We formalize the concept of industry viability, investigate its determinants, and show that viability is always enhanced by having more firms in the market and/or by technological progress.The second chapter studies covert information acquisition in common value Bayesian games of strategic complementarities. Using the supermodular stochastic order to arrange the structures of information increasingly in terms of preferences, we provide novel, easily interpretable conditions under which the value of information is globally convex, and study the implications in terms of the equilibrium configuration. Our analysis also enlightens the effect of information on players' behavior.Chapter three proposes a simple approach to compare players' equilibrium choices in asymmetric games with strategic complementarities. We offer three applications of our idea to industrial organization and behavioral economics.The last chapter studies (nonparametric) partial identification of treatment response with social interactions. It imposes economically driven monotone conditions to the primitives of the model, i.e., the structural equations, and shows that they imply shape restrictions on the distribution of potential outcomes by means of monotone comparative statics. We propose precise conditions that validate counterfactual predictions in models with multiple equilibria. Under three sets of assumptions, we identify sharp distributional bounds (in terms of stochastic dominance) on the potential outcomes given observable data. We illustrate our results by studying the effect of police per-capita on crime rates in New York state. 2011 Electronic Dissertation text http://hdl.handle.net/10150/145399 752261320 11452 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Identification
Information
Network goods
Supermodularity
spellingShingle Identification
Information
Network goods
Supermodularity
Lazzati, Natalia
Network Goods, Information and Identification: Complementarities and Strategic Behavior
description The notion of complementarity is fundamental to economics, as reflected in the large and growing number of studies that invoke alternate conceptions of this idea. Though complementarity has been studied for many years, its connection with theory of supermodularity is far more recent. Taking advantage of these techniques, the first three chapters of this dissertation study aspects of interest in network markets; endogenous information acquisition; and some insights into the comparison of player's equilibrium strategies. The last chapter applies this methodology to econometric identification.Chapter one provides a thorough analysis of oligopolistic markets with positive demand-side network externalities and perfect compatibility. With a general complementarity structure on the model primitives allowing for products with low or high stand-alone values, a nontrivial fulfilled-expectations equilibrium exists. We formalize the concept of industry viability, investigate its determinants, and show that viability is always enhanced by having more firms in the market and/or by technological progress.The second chapter studies covert information acquisition in common value Bayesian games of strategic complementarities. Using the supermodular stochastic order to arrange the structures of information increasingly in terms of preferences, we provide novel, easily interpretable conditions under which the value of information is globally convex, and study the implications in terms of the equilibrium configuration. Our analysis also enlightens the effect of information on players' behavior.Chapter three proposes a simple approach to compare players' equilibrium choices in asymmetric games with strategic complementarities. We offer three applications of our idea to industrial organization and behavioral economics.The last chapter studies (nonparametric) partial identification of treatment response with social interactions. It imposes economically driven monotone conditions to the primitives of the model, i.e., the structural equations, and shows that they imply shape restrictions on the distribution of potential outcomes by means of monotone comparative statics. We propose precise conditions that validate counterfactual predictions in models with multiple equilibria. Under three sets of assumptions, we identify sharp distributional bounds (in terms of stochastic dominance) on the potential outcomes given observable data. We illustrate our results by studying the effect of police per-capita on crime rates in New York state.
author2 Amir, Rabah
author_facet Amir, Rabah
Lazzati, Natalia
author Lazzati, Natalia
author_sort Lazzati, Natalia
title Network Goods, Information and Identification: Complementarities and Strategic Behavior
title_short Network Goods, Information and Identification: Complementarities and Strategic Behavior
title_full Network Goods, Information and Identification: Complementarities and Strategic Behavior
title_fullStr Network Goods, Information and Identification: Complementarities and Strategic Behavior
title_full_unstemmed Network Goods, Information and Identification: Complementarities and Strategic Behavior
title_sort network goods, information and identification: complementarities and strategic behavior
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/145399
work_keys_str_mv AT lazzatinatalia networkgoodsinformationandidentificationcomplementaritiesandstrategicbehavior
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