Misrepresentation of Credence Goods and Channel Design
Author(s) -
Dinah Cohen-Vernik,
Pınar Yıldırım,
Vikas Mittal
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
ssrn electronic journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1556-5068
DOI - 10.2139/ssrn.2552807
Subject(s) - misrepresentation , credence , credence good , business , channel (broadcasting) , commerce , economics , industrial organization , computer science , law , telecommunications , finance , information asymmetry , political science , machine learning
Credence goods are often delivered to consumers via a vertical channel where the true quality of the good is determined by a manufacturer (an upstream channel member), while consumers' quality perceptions are driven by the observable signals of quality sent by a retailer (a downstream channel member). We study product misrepresentation in a vertical channel with asymmetric information about true product quality and focus on conditions that incentivize downstream channel members to misrepresent product quality to consumers. We develop a model with credulous consumers who rely on seller signals of quality to determine their expected utility from consumption of goods. The model shows that product misrepresentation rises as an equilibrium outcome due to actions of both the manufacturer and the retailer. We suggest that channel design can be a mechanism mitigating the level of misrepresentation. Specifically, adding more retailers in a channel can reduce the extent of misconduct and can increase the profits of the channel members.
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