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This version was published on March 1, 2008
Journal of Macromarketing, Vol. 28, No. 1, 68-84 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/0276146707311515
© 2008 SAGE Publications

Buyer–Seller Information Asymmetry: Challenges to Distributive and Corrective Justice

Oswald A. Mascarenhas

Ram Kesavan

University of Detroit Mercy

Michael Bernacchi

University of Detroit Mercy

Buyer—seller information asymmetry (BSIA) is a growing problem despite electronic modes of free global communications. The authors investigate this BSIA phenomenon from a macromarketing perspective. They first identify the defective structures and outcomes of BSIA and then examine the underlying structures of injustice that BSIA implies from a distributive justice view. Although distributive justice focuses on a universal mission of distributing burdens and benefits among all stakeholders, a complementary system, corrective justice, is needed to rectify specific injustices inherent in individual exchanges. Accordingly, the authors propose a BSIA reduction protocol based on both distributive and corrective justice principles so that the risks and causes of consumer harm inherent in BSIA will be progressively reduced. Finally, the authors discuss managerial implications of this combined justice approach and the BSIA reduction protocol it grounds.

Key Words: information asymmetry • corrective justice • distributive justice • marketing ethics • reduction of asymmetry of information in exchange


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