Arguing that consumers are the carriers of firms’ reputations, we examine the role of consumer networks for trust in markets that suffer from moral hazard. When consumers are embedded in a network, they can exchange information with their neighbours about their private experiences with different sellers. We find that such information exchange fosters firms' incentives for reputation building and, thus, enhances trust and efficiency in markets. This efficiency-enhancing effect is already achieved with a rather low level of network density.trust; consumer networks; moral hazard; information conditions; reputation
Reputation has been shown to provide an informal solution to the problem of cooperation in human soc...
The emerging paradigm of network competition is increasingly in evidence across many industrial sect...
This paper explores the trade-off between the short-term benefits of false quality advertisements ag...
Many Internet markets rely on ‘feedback systems’, essentially social networks of reputation, to faci...
We experimentally compare low-information, high-information and self-reporting reputation mechanis...
Network-based transactions are attractive as a system for economic exchange because they give networ...
We examine the effects of different forms of feedback information on the performance of markets that...
Electronic reputation or "feedback" mechanisms aim to mitigate the moral hazard problems associated ...
Reputation has been shown to provide an informal solution to the problem of cooperation in human soc...
Many Internet trading platforms rely on 'feedback systems ' to increase trust and trustwor...
In his book Trust. The Evolutionary Game of Mind and Society, social psychologist Toshio Yamagishi (...
Both economists and sociologists generally recognize the importance of reputation in coordinating ec...
Reputation has been shown to provide an informal solution to the problem of cooperation in human soc...
Reputation has been shown to provide an informal solution to the problem of cooperation in human soc...
In today’s online markets, the reputation mechanism undergoes its most successful propagation in hum...
Reputation has been shown to provide an informal solution to the problem of cooperation in human soc...
The emerging paradigm of network competition is increasingly in evidence across many industrial sect...
This paper explores the trade-off between the short-term benefits of false quality advertisements ag...
Many Internet markets rely on ‘feedback systems’, essentially social networks of reputation, to faci...
We experimentally compare low-information, high-information and self-reporting reputation mechanis...
Network-based transactions are attractive as a system for economic exchange because they give networ...
We examine the effects of different forms of feedback information on the performance of markets that...
Electronic reputation or "feedback" mechanisms aim to mitigate the moral hazard problems associated ...
Reputation has been shown to provide an informal solution to the problem of cooperation in human soc...
Many Internet trading platforms rely on 'feedback systems ' to increase trust and trustwor...
In his book Trust. The Evolutionary Game of Mind and Society, social psychologist Toshio Yamagishi (...
Both economists and sociologists generally recognize the importance of reputation in coordinating ec...
Reputation has been shown to provide an informal solution to the problem of cooperation in human soc...
Reputation has been shown to provide an informal solution to the problem of cooperation in human soc...
In today’s online markets, the reputation mechanism undergoes its most successful propagation in hum...
Reputation has been shown to provide an informal solution to the problem of cooperation in human soc...
The emerging paradigm of network competition is increasingly in evidence across many industrial sect...
This paper explores the trade-off between the short-term benefits of false quality advertisements ag...