Discussion paper

DP15537 Asymmetric Information and Delegated Selling

Asymmetric information about product quality can create incentives for a privately informed manufacturer to sell to uninformed consumers through a retailer and to maintain secrecy of upstream pricing. Delegating retail price setting to an intermediary generates pooling equilibria that avoid signaling distortions associated with direct selling even under reasonable restrictions on beliefs; these beliefs can also prevent double marginalization by the retailer. Expected profit, consumer surplus and social welfare can all be higher with intermediated selling. However, if secrecy of upstream pricing cannot be maintained, selling through a retailer can only lower the expected profit of the manufacturer.

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Citation

Janssen, M and S Roy (2020), ‘DP15537 Asymmetric Information and Delegated Selling‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 15537. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp15537