Global manipulation by local obfuscation

  • Fei Li
  • , Yangbo Song
  • , Mofei Zhao*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

We study adversarial information design in a regime-change context. A continuum of agents simultaneously chooses whether to attack the current regime. The attack succeeds if and only if the mass of attackers outweighs the regime's strength. A designer manipulates information about the regime's strength to maintain the status quo. Our optimal information structure exhibits local obfuscation: some agents receive a signal matching the regime's true strength, and others receive an elevated signal professing slightly higher strength. This policy is the unique limit of finite-signal problems. Public signals are strictly suboptimal, and in some cases where public signals become futile, local obfuscation guarantees the collapse of agents' coordination, making the designer's information disclosure time consistent and relieving the usual commitment concern.

Original languageEnglish
Article number105575
JournalJournal of Economic Theory
Volume207
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2023

Keywords

  • Coordination
  • Information design
  • Regime-change game

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