Patrocinador:
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
Agradecimientos:
Loeper acknowledges the financial support from grant ECO2010‐19596 from the Spanish ‘Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación’. Steiner was supported by Purkyne fellowship of the Czech Academy of Sciences and by GACR grant 13‐34759S. Stewart is grateful to SSHRC for financial support of this research.
Proyecto:
Gobierno de España. ECO2010-19596
Palabras clave:
Regime change
,
Global games
,
Information
,
Revolution
,
Coordination
,
Diffusion
,
Networks
,
Cascades
,
Activism
,
Attacks
We present a two-stage coordination game in which early choices of experts with special
interests are observed by followers who move in the second stage. We show that the equilibrium
outcome is biased toward the experts’ interests even though followers know We present a two-stage coordination game in which early choices of experts with special
interests are observed by followers who move in the second stage. We show that the equilibrium
outcome is biased toward the experts’ interests even though followers know the distribution of
expert interests. Expert influence is fully decentralised in the sense that each individual expert
has a negligible impact. The bias in favour of experts results from a social learning effect that is
multiplied through a coordination motive. We apply our results to the onset of social movements
and to the diffusion of products with network externalities.[+][-]