Peer-to-Peer Markets with Bilateral Ratings
Abstract
Abstract. Peer-to-peer (P2P) markets have become a critical aspect of the modern economy. We consider a P2P market in which a time-sensitive service is provided through a platform that matches providers of varying qualities to customers of varying costs. The P2P platform features bilateral ratings, which distinguish it from a traditional market: ratings of a provider reveal the provider’s service quality and ratings of a customer reveal the customer’s service cost. The existence of a cost measure in the P2P market leads to novel pricing considerations: a provider can attract low-cost customers by charging a low price, leading to an endogenous composition effect. As a result, equilibrium prices may decrease as customers become more costly to serve or as the platform’s commission rate gets higher. Under certain conditions, high-quality providers may even charge a lower equilibrium price than low-quality providers in order to cherry-pick low-cost customers. Exploratory analysis reveals that, compared with unilateral ratings, bilateral ratings may soften provider competition and raise equilibrium prices as the providers target customers in different cost segments.
History: Anthony Dukes served as the senior editor.
Funding: This work was supported by the NET Institute (summer research fund).
Supplemental Material: The online appendix is available at https://doi.org/10.1287/mksc.2022.0158.

