Value of Information in Social Learning
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Abstract
This study extends Blackwell's (1953) comparison of information to a sequential social learning model in which agents make decisions sequentially based on both private signals and observed actions of others.
In this context, we introduce a binary relation over information structures: an information structure is {\it more socially valuable} than another if it yields higher expected payoffs for {\it all} agents, regardless of their preferences and equilibrium realizations.
First, we establish that this binary relation is strictly stronger than the Blackwell order.
Next, we provide a necessary and sufficient condition for our binary relation and propose a simpler sufficient condition that is easier to verify.
We further explore comparisons of information structures in terms of long-run payoffs, limit welfare, and canonical binary environments.