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α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count
We study the practice of influencer marketing in oligopoly markets and its effect on market efficiency. In our model, each consumer is influenced by choices of a subset of other consumers. Firms gather information on consumers' influence and price discriminate using this information. In equilibrium, firms charge premia/subsidize below-/above-average-influential consumers; the premia/discounts depend on the strength of network effects and on how much information firms have on consumers' influence. Influencer marketing leads to inefficient consumer-product matches. Firms' investments in information are strategic complements, leading to a race for information acquisition that erodes welfare and firms' profits but increases consumer surplus.