Privacy of consumers or citizens is often seen as an inefficient information asymmetry. We challenge this view by showing that privacy can increase welfare in an informational sense. It can also improve information aggregation and prevent inefficient statistical discrimination. We show how and when the different informational effects of privacy line up to make privacy efficient or even Pareto-optimal. Our theory can be applied to decide who should have which information and how privacy and information disclosure should be regulated. We discuss applications to online privacy, credit decisions and transparency in government
There are important public debates on how—or even whether—to regulate information about previous tra...
We investigate the effects of price discrimination on prices, profits, and consumer surplus when (a)...
Privacy law has languished for decades while the other information law doctrines have flourished. Th...
Privacy of consumers or citizens is often seen as an inefficient information asymmetry. We challenge...
Discussions of information privacy typically rely on the idea that there is a trade off between priv...
Privacy is commonly studied as a private good: my personal data is mine to protect and control, and ...
There is a long history of governmental efforts to protect personal privacy and strong debates about...
The Internet is shaping our daily lives. On the one hand, social networks like Facebook and Twitter ...
Most people seem to agree that individuals have too little privacy, and most proposals to address th...
There is a long history of governmental efforts to protect personal privacy and strong debates about...
This chapter reviews economic analyses of privacy. We begin by scrutinizing the "free market" critiq...
Traditional theory suggests consumers should be able to manage their privacy. Yet, empirical and the...
The advent of the Internet has made the transmission of personally identifiable information more com...
People have subjective valuations of privacy. Thus, absent further considerations, efficiency requir...
As the economic value of aggregating personal data has grown, so too have concerns over the economic...
There are important public debates on how—or even whether—to regulate information about previous tra...
We investigate the effects of price discrimination on prices, profits, and consumer surplus when (a)...
Privacy law has languished for decades while the other information law doctrines have flourished. Th...
Privacy of consumers or citizens is often seen as an inefficient information asymmetry. We challenge...
Discussions of information privacy typically rely on the idea that there is a trade off between priv...
Privacy is commonly studied as a private good: my personal data is mine to protect and control, and ...
There is a long history of governmental efforts to protect personal privacy and strong debates about...
The Internet is shaping our daily lives. On the one hand, social networks like Facebook and Twitter ...
Most people seem to agree that individuals have too little privacy, and most proposals to address th...
There is a long history of governmental efforts to protect personal privacy and strong debates about...
This chapter reviews economic analyses of privacy. We begin by scrutinizing the "free market" critiq...
Traditional theory suggests consumers should be able to manage their privacy. Yet, empirical and the...
The advent of the Internet has made the transmission of personally identifiable information more com...
People have subjective valuations of privacy. Thus, absent further considerations, efficiency requir...
As the economic value of aggregating personal data has grown, so too have concerns over the economic...
There are important public debates on how—or even whether—to regulate information about previous tra...
We investigate the effects of price discrimination on prices, profits, and consumer surplus when (a)...
Privacy law has languished for decades while the other information law doctrines have flourished. Th...