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Optimal Disclosure of Information to a Privately Informed Receiver

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  • Ozan Candogan
  • Philipp Strack

Abstract

We study information design settings where the designer controls information about a state, and there are multiple agents interacting in a game who are privately informed about their types. Each agent's utility depends on all agents' types and actions, as well as (linearly) on the state. To optimally screen the agents, the designer first asks agents to report their types and then sends a private action recommendation to each agent whose distribution depends on all reported types and the state. We show that there always exists an optimal mechanism which is laminar partitional. Such a mechanism partitions the state space for each type profile and recommends the same action profile for states that belong to the same partition element. Furthermore, the convex hulls of any two partition elements are such that either one contains the other or they have an empty intersection. In the single-agent case, each state is either perfectly revealed or lies in an interval in which the number of different signal realizations is at most the number of different types of the agent plus two. A similar result is established for the multi-agent case. We also highlight the value of screening: without screening the best achievable payoff could be as low as one over the number of types fraction of the optimal payoff. Along the way, we shed light on the solutions of optimization problems over distributions subject to a mean-preserving contraction constraint and additional side constraints, which might be of independent interest.

Suggested Citation

  • Ozan Candogan & Philipp Strack, 2021. "Optimal Disclosure of Information to a Privately Informed Receiver," Papers 2101.10431, arXiv.org, revised Jan 2022.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2101.10431
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    Cited by:

    1. Dirk Bergemann & Paul Duetting & Renato Paes Leme & Song Zuo, 2021. "Calibrated Click-Through Auctions: An Information Design Approach," Cowles Foundation Discussion Papers 2285, Cowles Foundation for Research in Economics, Yale University.
    2. Kun Zhang, 2022. "Withholding Verifiable Information," Papers 2206.09918, arXiv.org, revised Sep 2022.

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