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Paper Number
1008
Paper Type
Completed
Description
Advances in artificial intelligence accelerate the digitization of pricing in various industry domains, from home appliances to hotels. At the same time, economic theories and legal cases claim that the advances benefit some players through synchronous algorithmic pricing, so-called Algorithmic Tacit Collusion (ATC). However, the previous studies rely on artificial intelligence’s broad collusion mechanisms in various pricing scenarios. The paper unravels the mixture of ATC problems by specifying the algorithmic pricing context in platform providers’ oligopoly and adjusting the underlying assumptions to the context. Our simulation of Iterative Prisoner’s Dilemma (IPD) games with various heterogeneous pricing algorithms show that ATC emerges in rare conditions (i.e., algorithm and information symmetries). Our findings suggest that understanding the technology and business architectures should precede deriving the theories of ATC and implementing the legal cases and policies of digitization for the next generation’s pricing.
Recommended Citation
Kang, Songhee; Kim, Myung Ho; and Kim, Kibae, "Raising Skepticisms on the Feasibility of Algorithmic Tacit Collusion" (2022). ICIS 2022 Proceedings. 1.
https://aisel.aisnet.org/icis2022/digit_nxt_gen/digit_nxt_gen/1
Raising Skepticisms on the Feasibility of Algorithmic Tacit Collusion
Advances in artificial intelligence accelerate the digitization of pricing in various industry domains, from home appliances to hotels. At the same time, economic theories and legal cases claim that the advances benefit some players through synchronous algorithmic pricing, so-called Algorithmic Tacit Collusion (ATC). However, the previous studies rely on artificial intelligence’s broad collusion mechanisms in various pricing scenarios. The paper unravels the mixture of ATC problems by specifying the algorithmic pricing context in platform providers’ oligopoly and adjusting the underlying assumptions to the context. Our simulation of Iterative Prisoner’s Dilemma (IPD) games with various heterogeneous pricing algorithms show that ATC emerges in rare conditions (i.e., algorithm and information symmetries). Our findings suggest that understanding the technology and business architectures should precede deriving the theories of ATC and implementing the legal cases and policies of digitization for the next generation’s pricing.
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