Affiliation:
1. Indiana University Bloomington Kelley School of Business
Abstract
Abstract
We consider a bargaining game in which both sides are uncertain about their opponent’s commitment, which leads to delay and welfare loss in equilibrium. We address the following question: does ex ante better public information about a player improve expected social welfare? We show that if the information cannot turn the bargaining table (turns the weak bargainer into a strong one and vice versa), more information does not help. More information about a weak bargainer has zero impact, whereas that about the strong bargainer is strictly detrimental. Moreover, by specializing in a binary signal structure, we show that if the information is more accurate in every state, it improves social welfare when it can turn the table.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Economics and Econometrics