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Cambridge Journal of Economics Advance Access published online on February 7, 2005

Cambridge Journal of Economics, doi:10.1093/cje/bei009
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Cambridge Journal of Economics © Cambridge Political Economy Society 2005; all rights reserved
Received September 12, 2003

Article

Shared quality uncertainty and the introduction of indeterminate goods

Sylvie Lupton 1*

1 University of Paris VIII

* To whom correspondence should be addressed.
Sylvie Lupton, E-mail: sylvielupton{at}yahoo.fr


   Abstract

The purpose of this paper is to introduce a new category of goods, ‘indeterminate goods’, which will be compared with the classical framework of experience, search and credence goods (Nelson, 1970; Darby and Karni, 1973). This concept sheds new light on the nature and status of quality uncertainty through the following hypothesis: uncertainty about the product's quality can be shared by all agents of the market, and this uncertainty can be non-neutral and disrupt the market. We identify three types of shared uncertainty about the product's characteristics and the corresponding problems that can arise: shared uncertainty due to the emergence of a product (Hirschman, 1974), shared uncertainty concerning the past of a product (basing ourselves on the art market), and finally shared uncertainty regarding the future impacts of a product, through empirical data on product safety.

Keywords: Product quality; Quality uncertainty; Shared uncertainty; Indeterminate goods; Radical uncertainty.
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