FREE-RIDING IN PRODUCTS WITH POSITIVE NETWORK EXTERNALITIES: EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE FROM A LARGE MOBILE NETWORK
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Belo, Rodrigo; Ferreira, Pedro
署名单位:
Erasmus University Rotterdam - Excl Erasmus MC; Erasmus University Rotterdam; Universidade Nova de Lisboa; Carnegie Mellon University
刊物名称:
MIS QUARTERLY
ISSN/ISSBN:
0276-7783
DOI:
10.25300/MISQ/2022/14712
发表日期:
2022
页码:
401-430
关键词:
social-influence
peer influence
diffusion
contagion
preferences
摘要:
We study the effect of peer influence on products that exhibit positive network externalities to non-adopters, i.e., products that benefit adopters' friends even if they do not adopt. In contrast to products that exhibit positive network externalities upon adoption, this structure of incentives likely results in negative peer influence: the more friends that adopt the product, the smaller the incentive to adopt. We measure this effect empirically by using observational data from a large mobile carrier serving 5.7 million users. We estimate the effect of peer influence across five different products of this type. A naive approach to do thisresults in a positive estimate for peer influence due to unobserved homophily. We follow two approaches to address this issue. First, we suggest using the number of friends that end up adopting aproduct as a proxy for unobserved user-fixed effects. Second, we control for homophily by applying a shuffle test, i.e., we compare the effect of peer influence from the original data with the effect obtained from comparable randomly generated data without peer influence. We obtain negative estimates from both approaches, which adds robustness to our findings. Finally, we show that even for these products, the effect of peer influence associated with the first friends that adopt the product is positive because they still convey useful information that reducesun certainty. The negative effect of peer influence arises only for subsequent friends that adopt the product. While these friends are unlikely to convey new information about the product, they decrease the economic incentive to adopt, resulting in a negative aggregate effect of peer influence.