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Does more information-gathering effort raise or lower the average quantity produced?

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  • Marschak, Thomas
  • Shanthikumar, J. George
  • Zhou, Junjie

Abstract

We aim at some simple theoretical underpinnings for a complex empirical question studied by labor economists and others: does Information-technology improvement lead to occupational shifts–toward “information workers” and away from other occupations–and to changes in the productivity of non-information workers? In our simple model there is a Producer, whose payoff depends on a production quantity and an unknown state of the world, and an Information-gatherer (IG) who expends effort to learn more about the unknown state and then sends the Producer a signal. The Producer responds by revising prior beliefs about the states and using the posterior to make an expected-payoff-maximizing quantity choice. We consider a variety of IGs and variety of Producers. For each IG there is a natural effort measure. Our central aim is to find conditions under which more IG effort leads to a larger average production quantity (“Complements”) and conditions under which it leads to a smaller average quantity (“Substitutes”). We start by considering Blackwell IGs, who meet the strong conditions required in the Blackwell theorems about the comparison of experiments. We then turn to non-Blackwell IGs, where the Blackwell theorems cannot be used and special techniques are needed to obtain Complements/Substitutes results.

Suggested Citation

  • Marschak, Thomas & Shanthikumar, J. George & Zhou, Junjie, 2017. "Does more information-gathering effort raise or lower the average quantity produced?," Journal of Mathematical Economics, Elsevier, vol. 69(C), pages 104-117.
  • Handle: RePEc:eee:mateco:v:69:y:2017:i:c:p:104-117
    DOI: 10.1016/j.jmateco.2017.01.004
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    1. M. Ali Khan & Haomiao Yu & Zhixiang Zhang, 2019. "Information Structures on a General State Space: An Equivalence Theorem and an Application," Working Papers 076, Ryerson University, Department of Economics.

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