“…Although the reflection problem was an important issue in the early peer-effects literature, since it prompted researchers to think carefully about model specification and identification, it has since become clear that it applies mostly to a sort of simple reduced-form model, and is not an issue in many other micro-founded models. For instance, as emphasized by Blume, Brock, Durlauf, and Ioannides (2011) and Blume, Brock, Durlauf, and Jayaraman (2015), the reflection problem is functional form dependent -not applying to many nonlinear models, and being even nongeneric in linear models. An additional, complemetary, insight is that network information, rather than only group-level information, can enable identification, as then the full feedback patterns pointed out by Manski (1993) can be disentangled by taking advantage of the fact that different individuals have different sets of peers, and therefore different exposures and net effects, as shown by Bramoullé, Djebbari, and Fortin (2009).…”