Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: The economics of uncertainty and information
- Part I
- Part II
- 5 Information and informational decisions
- 6 The economics of emergent public information
- 7 Research and invention
- 8 Informational asymmetry and contract design
- 9 Strategic uncertainty and equilibrium concepts
- 10 The economics of contests
- 11 Competition and hidden knowledge
- 12 Long-run relationships and the credibility of threats and promises
- Index
6 - The economics of emergent public information
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: The economics of uncertainty and information
- Part I
- Part II
- 5 Information and informational decisions
- 6 The economics of emergent public information
- 7 Research and invention
- 8 Informational asymmetry and contract design
- 9 Strategic uncertainty and equilibrium concepts
- 10 The economics of contests
- 11 Competition and hidden knowledge
- 12 Long-run relationships and the credibility of threats and promises
- Index
Summary
In part I, dealing with the economics of uncertainty, after covering the “terminal” decisions of the individual in chapters 1 through 3 we moved on in chapter 4 to consider market equilibrium. And similarly here in the realm of the economics of information: having examined individuals' “nonterminal” (informational) decisions in chapter 5, we now turn to the analysis of the market equilibrium generated thereby.
A first key distinction is between public and private information. If an information service provides public information, decision-makers through-out the economy will be attempting to revise their portfolios in the light of their changed beliefs. Consequently, asset prices will adjust. In particular, market values will rise for those assets paying off more handsomely in states of the world now regarded as more likely. If on the other hand the message provided is strictly private, an informed party may be able to profit in various ways without any noticeable effect upon prices. However, as we shall see, almost always there are processes at work tending to “publicize” private information. Sometimes this occurs because the informed individual can gain by intended disclosure of his data, for example if he sells it to others. Or sometimes there may be unintended leakage into the public domain – owing, perhaps, to the fact that the uninformed can monitor the behavior of those who are informed. These more difficult problems are reserved for later chapters; only fully public information will be examined in this chapter.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Analytics of Uncertainty and Information , pp. 225 - 257Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1992