Conversations among Competitors
I develop a model of bilateral conversations in which players honestly exchange ideas with their competitors. The key to incentive compatibility is a complementarity in the information structure: a player can only generate a new insight if he has access to his counterpart’s previous thoughts on a topic. I then examine a social network in which A has a conversation with B, then B has a conversation with C, and so on. Relatively underdeveloped ideas can travel long distances over the network. More valuable ideas, by contrast, tend to remain localized among small groups of agents. (JEL D82, D83)
Year of publication: |
2008
|
---|---|
Authors: | Stein, Jeremy |
Institutions: | Department of Economics, Harvard University |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Disagreement and the Stock Market
Hong, Harrison, (2007)
-
Growth Versus Margins: Destabilizing Consequences of Giving the Stock Market What it Wants
Stein, Jeremy, (2008)
-
The Only Game in Town: Stock-Price Consequences of Local Bias
Stein, Jeremy, (2008)
- More ...