This paper studies a model of strategic communication by an informed and upwardly biased sender to one or more receivers. Applications include situations in which it is costly for the sender to misrepresent information, due to legal, technological, or moral constraints, or receivers may be credulous and blindly believe the sender's recommendation. In contrast to the predictions obtained in Crawford and Sobel's benchmark cheap talk model, our model admits a fully separating equilibrium, provided that the state space is unbounded above. The language used in equilibrium is inflated and naive receivers are deceived.
Credulity, lies, and costly talk
OTTAVIANI, MARCO M.;
2007
Abstract
This paper studies a model of strategic communication by an informed and upwardly biased sender to one or more receivers. Applications include situations in which it is costly for the sender to misrepresent information, due to legal, technological, or moral constraints, or receivers may be credulous and blindly believe the sender's recommendation. In contrast to the predictions obtained in Crawford and Sobel's benchmark cheap talk model, our model admits a fully separating equilibrium, provided that the state space is unbounded above. The language used in equilibrium is inflated and naive receivers are deceived.File in questo prodotto:
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