Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
957380 Journal of Economic Theory 2012 31 Pages PDF
Abstract

We study the diffusion of dispersed private information in a large economy, where agents learn from the actions of others through two channels: a public channel, such as equilibrium market prices, and a private channel, for example local interactions. We show that, when agents learn only   from the public channel, an initial release of public information increases agentsʼ total knowledge at all times and increases welfare. When a private learning channel is present, this result is reversed: more initial public information reduces agents asymptotic knowledge by an amount in order of log(t)log(t) units of precision. When agents are sufficiently patient, this reduces welfare.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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