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Consumer choice under limited attention when options have different information costs

Author

Listed:
  • Frank Huettner,

    (ESMT European School of Management and Technology)

  • Tamer Boyaci,

    (ESMT European School of Management and Technology)

  • Yalcin Akcay

    (College of Administrative Sciences and Economics, Koç University)

Abstract

Consumers often do not have complete information about the choices they face and therefore have to spend time and effort in acquiring information. Since information acquisition is costly, consumers have to trade-off the value of better information against its cost, and make their final choices based on imperfect information. We model this decision using the rational inattention approach and describe the rationally inattentive consumer’s choice behavior when she faces options with different information costs. To this end, we introduce an information cost function that distinguishes between direct and inferential information. We then analytically characterize the optimal behavior and derive the choice probabilities in closed-form. We find that non-uniform information costs can have a strong impact on product choice, which gets particularly conspicuous when the product alternatives are otherwise very similar. It can also lead to situations where it is disadvantageous for the seller to provide easier access to information for a particular product. Furthermore, it provides a new explanation for strong failure of regularity of consumer behaviour, which occurs if the addition of an inferior – never chosen – product to the choice set increases the market share of another existing product.

Suggested Citation

  • Frank Huettner, & Tamer Boyaci, & Yalcin Akcay, 2016. "Consumer choice under limited attention when options have different information costs," ESMT Research Working Papers ESMT-16-04, ESMT European School of Management and Technology, revised 04 Oct 2016.
  • Handle: RePEc:esm:wpaper:esmt-16-04
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    More about this item

    Keywords

    discrete choice; rational inattention; information acquisition; non-uniform information costs; strong failure of regularity;
    All these keywords.

    JEL classification:

    • D40 - Microeconomics - - Market Structure, Pricing, and Design - - - General
    • D80 - Microeconomics - - Information, Knowledge, and Uncertainty - - - General

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