Reputation Effects under Short Memories
Abstract
I analyze a novel reputation game between a patient seller and a sequence of myopic consumers, in which the consumers have limited memories and do not know the exact sequence of the seller's actions. I focus on the case where each consumer only observes the number of times that the seller took each of his actions in the last K periods. When payoffs are monotone-supermodular, I show that the patient seller can approximately secure his commitment payoff in all equilibria as long as K is at least one. I also show that the consumers can approximately attain their first-best welfare in all equilibria if and only if their memory length K is lower than some cutoff. Although a longer memory enables more consumers to punish the seller once the seller shirks, it weakens their incentives to punish the seller once they observe him shirking
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.2207.02744,
title = {Reputation Effects under Short Memories},
author = {Harry Pei},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2207.02744},
year = {2023}
}