Webinar Series
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Innovation, Productivity and Challenges in the Digital Era: Asia and Beyond
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Sep 2022
Data Privacy and Digital Demand
We combine survey and behavioral data to analyze consumers’ data-sharing choices in a realistic setting in which they exchange personal data for digital services. We find that respondents with stronger privacy concerns authorize more, rather than less, data sharing, confirming the data privacy paradox. Instead of attributing this paradox to the respondents’ unreliable survey responses, resignation from privacy, or behavioral biases, we uncover that privacy-concerned respondents have greater demands for digital services, which offset their privacy concerns. Our findings highlight a key tension for the data economy—privacy concerns and digital demands both grow with the deepening of digital services.