Abstract
We study public persuasion when a sender communicates with a large audience that can fact-check at heterogeneous costs. The sender commits to a public information policy before the state is realized, but any verifiable claim she makes after observing the state must be truthful (an ex-post implementability constraint). Receivers observe the public message and then decide whether to verify; this selective verification feeds back into the sender’s objective and turns the design problem into a constrained version of Bayesian persuasion. Our main result is a reverse comparative static: when factchecking becomes cheaper in the population, the sender optimally supplies a strictly less informative public signal. Intuitively, cheaper verification makes bold claims invite scrutiny, so the sender coarsens information to dampen the incentive to verify. We also endogenize two ex-post instruments—continuous falsification and fixed-cost repression—and characterize threshold substitutions from persuasion to manipulation and, ultimately, to repression as monitoring improves. The framework provides testable predictions for how transparency, manipulation, and repression co-move with changes in verification technology.
Keywords
Bayesian persuasion; information design; verifiable evidence; costly verification; public signals; Blackwell informativeness; falsification; repression;
JEL codes
- D72: Political Processes: Rent-Seeking, Lobbying, Elections, Legislatures, and Voting Behavior
- D82: Asymmetric and Private Information • Mechanism Design
- D84: Expectations • Speculations
- L14: Transactional Relationships • Contracts and Reputation • Networks
Reference
Georgy Lukyanov, and Samuel Safaryan, “Public Persuasion with Endogenous Fact-Checking”, TSE Working Paper, n. 26-1714, February 2026.
See also
Published in
TSE Working Paper, n. 26-1714, February 2026
