Private Provision of Public Goods and Information Diffusion in Social Groups
We describe a dynamic model of costly information sharing, where private information affecting collective-value actions is transmitted by social proximity. Individuals make voluntary contributions towards the provision of a pure public good, and information transmission about quality of provision is a necessary condition for collective provision to take place in a stationary equilibrium. We show that, unlike in the case of private goods, better informed individuals face positive incentives to incur a cost to share information with their neighbours; and that these incentives are stronger, and provision of the pure public good greater, the smaller are individuals’ social neighbourhoods.
H10 - Structure and Scope of Government. General ; L30 - Nonprofit Organizations and Public Enterprise. General ; D60 - Welfare Economics. General ; D70 - Analysis of Collective Decision-Making. General