Information Inequality and the Role of Public Information

Research Seminars: Mannheim Virtual IO Seminar

Transparent disclosures of public information might be one natural policy to reduce information inequality among individuals. The paper presented in this Mannheim Virtual IO Seminar conducts a welfare analysis of such policy by introducing ex-ante heterogeneity in individuals' private information in a class of economies with dispersed information and externalities. The authors find that, paradoxically, welfare unambiguously increases when information inequality widens through greater precision of private information for the already informationally-rich individuals. They also show that the greater the information inequality, the more likely that public information reduces welfare. Their findings suggest caution in making information policies that aim to narrow informational gap with better public information.

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