Cursed Consumers and the Effectiveness of Consumer Protection Policies

Authors:

Ispano, Alessandro (CY Cergy Paris Université, CNRS and THEMA)
Schwardmann, Peter (LMU Munich)

Abstract:

We model firms’ quality disclosure and pricing in the presence of cursed consumers, who fail to be sufficiently skeptical about undisclosed quality. We show that cursed consumers are exploited in duopoly markets if firms are vertically differentiated, if there are few cursed consumers, and if average product quality is high. Three common consumer protection policies that work under monopoly, i.e. mandatory disclosure, third party disclosure and consumer education, may all increase exploitation and decrease welfare. Even where these policies improve overall welfare, they often lead to a reduction in consumer surplus. We show that our conclusions hold in extensions with endogenous quality choice and horizontal differentiation.

Keywords:

naive; cursed; disclosure; consumer protection; labeling; competition

JEL-Classification:

C72; D03; D82; D83

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Cursed Consumers and the Effectiveness of Consumer Protection Policies
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