Individuals might experience negative utility from not consuming a popular product. For example, being inactive on social media can lead to social exclusion or not owning luxury brands can be associated with having a low social status. We show that, in the presence of such spillovers to non-users, standard measures that take aggregate consumption as given fail to appropriately capture welfare. We propose a new methodology to measure welfare that accounts for these consumption spillovers, which we apply to estimate the consumer surplus of two popular social media platforms, TikTok and Instagram. In large-scale, incentivized experiments with college students, we show that, while the standard welfare measure suggests a large and positive surplus, our measure accounting for consumption spillovers indicates a negative surplus, with a large share of active users deriving negative utility. We also shed light on the drivers of consumption spillovers to non-users in the case of social media and show that, in this setting, the “fear of missing out” plays an important role. Our framework and estimates highlight the possibility of product market traps, where large shares of consumers are trapped in an inefficient equilibrium and would prefer the product not to exist.

More on this topic

BFI Working Paper·Mar 17, 2026

Quantum Bayesian Inference: An Exploration

Jon Frost, Carlos Madeira, Yash Rastogi, and Harald Uhlig
Topics: Uncategorized
BFI Working Paper·Feb 23, 2026

Multidimensional Signaling and the Rise of Cultural Politics

Daron Acemoglu, Georgy Egorov, and Konstantin Sonin
Topics: Uncategorized
BFI Working Paper·Feb 2, 2026

Diversionary Escalation: Theory and Evidence from Eastern Ukraine

Natalie Ayers, Christopher W. Blair, Joseph J. Ruggiero, Konstantin Sonin, and Austin Wright
Topics: Uncategorized