2014
DOI: 10.1257/aer.104.8.2400
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Not Only What but Also When: A Theory of Dynamic Voluntary Disclosure

Abstract: We study a dynamic model of voluntary disclosure of information by a potentially informed agent. The extant theoretical literature on voluntary disclosure focuses on static models in which an interested party (e.g., a manager of a firm) may privately observe a single piece of private information (e.g., Grossman 1981;Milgrom 1981;Dye 1985;and Jung and Kwon 1988) or dynamic models in which the disclosure timing does not play a role (e.g., Shin 2003Shin , 2006 as the manager's decision is what to disclose but not… Show more

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Cited by 137 publications
(47 citation statements)
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“…In the direction of multiple documents, Fluet and Lanzi () and Guttman, Kremer, and Skrzypacz () study settings in which a sender may have more than one signal that can be verifiably disclosed, so there are multiple channels of information. Both assume equilibrium, and they focus on different issues than we address.…”
Section: Related Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the direction of multiple documents, Fluet and Lanzi () and Guttman, Kremer, and Skrzypacz () study settings in which a sender may have more than one signal that can be verifiably disclosed, so there are multiple channels of information. Both assume equilibrium, and they focus on different issues than we address.…”
Section: Related Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet, there is little awareness in the existing literature of the implications of the multi-period nature of guidance (Hirst et al 2008). Second, unlike in a single-period setting, a multi-period setting makes guidance provision more informative by allowing investors to form expectations of future guidance based on a firm's guidance provided in the past (e.g., Einhorn and Ziv 2008;Guttman et al 2014). In particular, we focus on two dimensions of a firm's past guidance--guidance frequency and guidance consistency, which we elaborate next.…”
Section: Theory and Hypothesesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In all experiments in [5], almost every single subject follows the most recent signal with staggering regularity, regardless of the signal's precision. This finding raises new questions on the timing of information revelation in electoral campaigns, casting further concerns about manipulation of voting behavior (see, for example, [6,7]).…”
mentioning
confidence: 95%