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008190618t20192019onc     ob   f000 0 eng d
040 |aCaOODSP|beng|erda|cCaOODSP
041 |aeng|bfre
0861 |aFB3-5/2019-22E-PDF
1001 |aIchihashi, Shota, |eauthor.
24510|aOnline privacy and information disclosure by consumers / |cby Shota Ichihashi.
264 1|aOttawa, Ontario, Canada : |bBank of Canada = Banque du Canada, |c2019.
264 4|c©2019
300 |a1 online resource (ii, 46 pages).
336 |atext|btxt|2rdacontent
337 |acomputer|bc|2rdamedia
338 |aonline resource|bcr|2rdacarrier
4901 |aBank of Canada staff working paper, |x1701-9397 ; |v2019-22
500 |a"June 2019."
504 |aIncludes bibliographical references (pages 30-33).
5203 |a"I study the welfare and price implications of consumer privacy. A consumer discloses information to a multi-product seller, which learns about the consumer’s preferences, sets prices, and makes product recommendations. While the consumer benefits from accurate product recommendations, the seller may use the information to price discriminate. I show that the seller prefers to commit to not using consumer information for pricing to encourage information disclosure. However, this commitment hurts the consumer, who could be better off by pre-committing to withhold some information. In contrast to single-product models, total surplus may be lower if the seller can base prices on information"--Abstract, page ii.
546 |aIncludes abstract in French.
69207|2gccst|aElectronic commerce
69207|2gccst|aConsumers
69207|2gccst|aPrivacy
69207|2gccst|aModels
7102 |aBank of Canada.
830#0|aStaff working paper (Bank of Canada)|x1701-9397 ;|v2019-22.|w(CaOODSP)9.806221
85640|qPDF|s1.30 MB|uhttps://publications.gc.ca/collections/collection_2019/banque-bank-canada/FB3-5-2019-22-eng.pdf