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arxiv: 2603.20609 · v2 · pith:MQA6CRMVnew · submitted 2026-03-21 · 💰 econ.TH

Strategy-proof Market Segmentation against Price Discrimination

Pith reviewed 2026-05-15 07:50 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 💰 econ.TH
keywords strategy-proofmarket segmentationprice discriminationmonopoly pricingconsumer surplusproducer surpluswelfare characterization
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The pith

In every strategy-proof segmentation, a monopolist's profit equals the uniform monopoly level while consumer surplus ranges from that level up to the buyer-optimal outcome.

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

The paper models consumers choosing segments first, before a monopolist observes the division and sets segment-specific prices. Strategy-proofness requires that no positive-measure group of consumers can gain by switching to a different segment. Under this condition, producer surplus is fixed at the single uniform monopoly price level for any such segmentation. Consumer surplus can reach any value between the uniform monopoly outcome and the maximum feasible for buyers, and every individual consumer is at least as well off as under uniform pricing. The authors construct explicit segmentations that attain every point in this welfare interval and show that finite-population equilibria converge to the same characterization as the market grows large.

Core claim

In every strategy-proof segmentation, producer surplus is pinned at the uniform monopoly profit, consumer surplus ranges from the uniform monopoly level to the buyer-optimal level, and every consumer is weakly better off. Strategy-proof segmentations exist that attain every feasible welfare point inside this range.

What carries the argument

Strategy-proofness: no positive-measure set of consumers can profitably deviate to another segment before the monopolist observes the segmentation and chooses prices.

Load-bearing premise

Consumers must choose segments before the monopolist sees the resulting division and sets prices, with deviations profitable only if a positive measure of consumers gains.

What would settle it

Exhibit a strategy-proof segmentation in which producer surplus strictly exceeds the uniform monopoly profit.

read the original abstract

Data regulations increasingly enable consumers to switch among market segments, making segmentation an endogenous outcome of strategic interaction. We study a model in which consumers choose segments before a monopolist sets segment-specific prices, and define a segmentation as strategy-proof when no consumer with positive measure can profitably deviate. Our main result provides a complete welfare characterization: in every strategy-proof segmentation, producer surplus is pinned at the uniform monopoly profit, consumer surplus ranges from the uniform monopoly level to the buyer-optimal level, and every consumer is weakly better off. We construct strategy-proof segmentations attaining every feasible outcome in this range. A finite-consumer model microfounds our solution concept, with equilibrium outcomes converging to our characterization as the population grows large.

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

2 major / 1 minor

Summary. The paper models endogenous market segmentation in which consumers first choose segments and a monopolist then sets segment-specific prices. A segmentation is strategy-proof if no consumer of positive measure can profitably deviate to another segment after the monopolist re-optimizes prices. The central result is a complete welfare characterization: every strategy-proof segmentation yields producer surplus exactly equal to the uniform-monopoly profit, consumer surplus anywhere between the uniform-monopoly level and the buyer-optimal level, and every consumer weakly better off. The authors construct strategy-proof segmentations attaining every point in this range and supply a finite-consumer microfoundation whose Nash equilibria converge to the continuum characterization as population size grows.

Significance. If the characterization and convergence hold, the paper delivers a sharp, parameter-free welfare bound for strategy-proof segmentation that pins producer surplus while allowing a full interval of consumer-surplus outcomes. The finite-to-continuum microfoundation supplies an independent non-cooperative grounding for the solution concept, which is a notable strength. The result bears directly on data-regulation debates about consumer switching and price discrimination.

major comments (2)
  1. [§5] §5 (Finite-consumer microfoundation and convergence): The load-bearing claim that finite-n equilibria densely fill the entire claimed interval of consumer surpluses while keeping producer surplus exactly at the uniform-monopoly level is not accompanied by an explicit topology on the space of segmentations, a rate of convergence, or an equilibrium-selection argument. Without these, it remains open whether every continuum strategy-proof segmentation is the limit of some sequence of finite equilibria or whether some finite equilibria converge outside the claimed welfare set.
  2. [Definition of strategy-proofness] Definition of strategy-proofness (continuum vs. finite): The continuum definition (no profitable positive-measure deviation after monopolist re-optimization) must be shown to be the exact limit of the finite-game deviation concept (unilateral or coalitional deviations with price-map anticipation). The current exposition leaves the passage to the limit implicit, which is central to the completeness of the characterization.
minor comments (1)
  1. [Abstract] The abstract states a 'complete characterization' but does not preview the topology or selection criterion used in the convergence argument; adding one sentence would improve readability.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful and constructive report. The concerns about the microfoundation in §5 are well-taken and point to places where greater formality will improve the paper. We will revise the manuscript to supply an explicit topology, convergence rate, and a formal limit argument linking the finite and continuum notions of strategy-proofness. These additions will not alter the main welfare characterization but will make the microfoundation fully rigorous.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: §5 (Finite-consumer microfoundation and convergence): The load-bearing claim that finite-n equilibria densely fill the entire claimed interval of consumer surpluses while keeping producer surplus exactly at the uniform-monopoly level is not accompanied by an explicit topology on the space of segmentations, a rate of convergence, or an equilibrium-selection argument. Without these, it remains open whether every continuum strategy-proof segmentation is the limit of some sequence of finite equilibria or whether some finite equilibria converge outside the claimed welfare set.

    Authors: We agree that the current exposition of convergence in §5 would benefit from additional formality. In the revision we will introduce the weak* topology on the space of segmentations (viewed as probability measures on the compact type space) and prove that the Hausdorff distance between the welfare sets generated by finite-n equilibria and the target continuum interval vanishes at rate O(1/n). Our construction of approximating equilibria is explicit: for any target continuum strategy-proof segmentation we partition the n consumers into groups whose empirical type distributions converge weakly to the continuum segments, and we verify that the resulting finite Nash equilibria remain strategy-proof for each n. This selection rule ensures that every point in the claimed continuum welfare interval is attained as a limit point and that no finite equilibrium converges outside the interval. revision: yes

  2. Referee: Definition of strategy-proofness (continuum vs. finite): The continuum definition (no profitable positive-measure deviation after monopolist re-optimization) must be shown to be the exact limit of the finite-game deviation concept (unilateral or coalitional deviations with price-map anticipation). The current exposition leaves the passage to the limit implicit, which is central to the completeness of the characterization.

    Authors: We will add a new lemma establishing the exact correspondence. The lemma states that a sequence of finite strategy-proof segmentations (in which no coalition of positive measure can profitably deviate while correctly anticipating the monopolist’s price map) converges weakly to a continuum segmentation if and only if the limit segmentation satisfies the continuum strategy-proofness condition. The proof proceeds by showing that the monopolist’s best-response price map is continuous in the weak* topology and that any positive-measure deviation in the continuum can be approximated by a coalition deviation of comparable size in the finite game for sufficiently large n. The converse direction follows from the fact that small-measure deviations in the continuum become negligible in the finite game. This renders the limiting argument fully rigorous. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

Welfare characterization follows directly from strategy-proof definition and timing

full rationale

The central claim derives producer-surplus pinning and the consumer-surplus interval from the explicit definition of strategy-proofness (no positive-measure profitable deviation after the monopolist re-optimizes) together with the given move order. The finite-consumer model is introduced as an independent microfoundation whose equilibria are shown to converge to the same outcomes; this supplies external consistency rather than a definitional reduction or load-bearing self-citation. No equation or step in the provided derivation chain equates the target result to its own inputs by construction.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The model rests on standard rationality and profit-maximization assumptions common to mechanism-design and industrial-organization settings; no free parameters, new entities, or ad-hoc axioms are introduced in the abstract.

axioms (2)
  • domain assumption Consumers are rational and choose segments to maximize their utility given anticipated prices
    Standard assumption in sequential game models of market segmentation
  • domain assumption The monopolist observes the realized segments and then chooses prices to maximize profit
    Defines the timing that makes segmentation endogenous

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5409 in / 1223 out tokens · 70184 ms · 2026-05-15T07:50:10.439395+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

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