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arxiv: 1906.09353 · v1 · pith:UDM27JLGnew · submitted 2019-06-21 · 💰 econ.TH · cs.CR· cs.DB

Suboptimal Provision of Privacy and Statistical Accuracy When They are Public Goods

Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 17:56 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 💰 econ.TH cs.CRcs.DB
keywords differential privacypublic goodsstatistical accuracyprivacy protectionprivate provisiondata qualitypopulation statisticsincentives
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The pith

Private firms that release population statistics under differential privacy produce inefficiently low data quality.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

Private technology companies hold large databases and can release population statistics that compete with those from public agencies. Privacy protection and statistical accuracy both act as public goods, so private firms face profit incentives that diverge from social goals. The paper builds a model of a firm that publishes statistics while satisfying a differential privacy guarantee. Under profit maximization the firm selects a privacy-accuracy tradeoff that delivers data quality below the social optimum. This result matters because widespread private statistics could leave society with systematically less accurate information than would be chosen if the full social value were internalized.

Core claim

In the model a private firm chooses the level of differential privacy and the resulting statistical accuracy to maximize its own profit; because the firm does not capture the external benefits that higher accuracy confers on all users, the equilibrium accuracy lies strictly below the socially efficient level.

What carries the argument

The firm's profit-maximizing choice of the differential privacy parameter, which determines the accuracy of the published statistics without internalizing their public-good value.

If this is right

  • Private provision results in statistical accuracy that is too low relative to the social optimum.
  • At least one of the two public goods—privacy or accuracy—will be supplied suboptimally.
  • Public statistical agencies may continue to hold an efficiency advantage in delivering data quality.
  • Policy may need to correct the private firm's incentive misalignment to reach efficient outcomes.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • Minimum accuracy requirements could be imposed on private statistical products to offset the underprovision.
  • The same incentive logic may apply to other markets in which firms supply information goods that carry privacy externalities.
  • Direct measurement of accuracy in private versus public releases on identical populations would test the predicted gap.

Load-bearing premise

The private firm maximizes only its own profit and does not internalize the full social value of privacy protection and statistical accuracy.

What would settle it

An empirical comparison showing that the accuracy of statistics released by private firms equals or exceeds the level that would be chosen by a social planner facing the same differential privacy constraint.

read the original abstract

With vast databases at their disposal, private tech companies can compete with public statistical agencies to provide population statistics. However, private companies face different incentives to provide high-quality statistics and to protect the privacy of the people whose data are used. When both privacy protection and statistical accuracy are public goods, private providers tend to produce at least one suboptimally, but it is not clear which. We model a firm that publishes statistics under a guarantee of differential privacy. We prove that provision by the private firm results in inefficiently low data quality in this framework.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

0 major / 2 minor

Summary. The paper constructs a model of a profit-maximizing firm that publishes population statistics subject to a differential privacy guarantee. It proves that the firm's incentive-compatible choice of privacy parameters and resulting statistical accuracy is strictly below the social planner's optimum when both privacy protection and statistical accuracy are non-rival, non-excludable public goods.

Significance. If the central proof is correct, the result supplies a clean theoretical mechanism for why private firms under-supply data quality relative to a social optimum in settings where privacy and accuracy are public goods. This is directly relevant to policy debates on private versus public statistical agencies and to the design of privacy regulations that affect data publication incentives. The use of differential privacy as the formal privacy notion is a strength, as it allows the model to be stated in terms of a well-defined privacy-accuracy tradeoff.

minor comments (2)
  1. The abstract states the main result but does not indicate the functional forms or the precise definition of 'data quality' used in the proof; adding a one-sentence preview of the key functional forms would improve readability.
  2. The manuscript would benefit from an explicit statement of the planner's problem (e.g., as a numbered equation) immediately before the proof that the firm's solution is strictly inferior.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

0 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the supportive summary of the paper and for recommending minor revision. The assessment correctly captures the model's focus on a profit-maximizing firm choosing differential privacy parameters and the resulting statistical accuracy when both are public goods.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

Theoretical model of public-goods underprovision; derivation self-contained

full rationale

The paper constructs an explicit economic model in which a profit-maximizing firm chooses differential-privacy parameters while both privacy protection and statistical accuracy are treated as public goods. It then compares the firm's equilibrium to the social planner's optimum and proves underprovision of data quality. This comparison follows directly from the stated incentive assumptions (firm does not internalize full social value) without any fitted parameters, self-referential definitions, or load-bearing self-citations. The result is a standard welfare comparison inside the model and does not reduce to its own inputs by construction.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 0 axioms · 0 invented entities

Abstract-only review provides no identifiable free parameters, axioms, or invented entities.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5626 in / 890 out tokens · 32241 ms · 2026-05-25T17:56:41.097542+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

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Reference graph

Works this paper leans on

7 extracted references · 7 canonical work pages

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    So, D and D′ are adjacent databases and x and y are the adjacent histogram representations of D and D′, respectively . Some caution is required when reviewing the related literature because definitions m ay be stated in terms of adjacent databases or adjacent histograms. A.2 T ranslation of the Ghosh-Roth Model to Our Notation In this appendix we show that...