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Suboptimal Provision of Privacy and Statistical Accuracy When They are Public Goods

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Listed:
  • John M. Abowd
  • Ian M. Schmutte
  • William Sexton
  • Lars Vilhuber

Abstract

With vast databases at their disposal, private tech companies can compete with public statistical agencies to provide population statistics. However, private companies face different incentives to provide high-quality statistics and to protect the privacy of the people whose data are used. When both privacy protection and statistical accuracy are public goods, private providers tend to produce at least one suboptimally, but it is not clear which. We model a firm that publishes statistics under a guarantee of differential privacy. We prove that provision by the private firm results in inefficiently low data quality in this framework.

Suggested Citation

  • John M. Abowd & Ian M. Schmutte & William Sexton & Lars Vilhuber, 2019. "Suboptimal Provision of Privacy and Statistical Accuracy When They are Public Goods," Papers 1906.09353, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:1906.09353
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    References listed on IDEAS

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