We study collusion within groups in noncooperative games. The primitives are the preferences of the players, their assignment to nonoverlapping groups, and the goals of the groups. Our notion of collusion is that a group coordinates the play of its members among different incentive compatible plans to best achieve its goals. Unfortunately, equilibria that meet this requirement need not exist. We instead introduce the weaker notion of collusion constrained equilibrium. This allows groups to put positive probability on alternatives that are suboptimal for the group in certain razor's edge cases where the set of incentive compatible plans changes discontinuously. These collusion constrained equilibria exist and are a subset of the correlated e...
A contract with multiple agents may be susceptible to collusion. We show that agents' collusion impo...
We analyze implications of collusion in a oneshot moral hazard model in which agents perfectly obser...
Collusion sustainability depends on firms’ aptitude to impose sufficiently severe punishments in cas...
We study collusion within groups in noncooperative games. The primitives are the preferences of the ...
We study collusion within groups in non-cooperative games. The primitives are the preferences of the...
First published: 01 February 2018This is an open access article licensed under the Creative Commons ...
We study collusion within groups in non-cooperative games. The primitives are the preferences of the...
We study collusion within groups in non-cooperative games. The primitives are the preferences of the...
We study collusion within groups in non-cooperative games. The primitives are the preferences of the...
We propose a theory of collusive groups in the context of finite non-cooperative games. We consider ...
We propose a theory of collusive groups in the context of finite non-cooperative games. We first con...
We propose a theory of collusive groups in the context of finite non-cooperative games. We first con...
This dissertation consists of three essays in microeconomics and organization theory. These essays a...
The collusion incentive constraint is an important economic measure of cartel stability. It weighs t...
Collusion sustainability depends on firms’ aptitude to impose sufficiently severe punishments in cas...
A contract with multiple agents may be susceptible to collusion. We show that agents' collusion impo...
We analyze implications of collusion in a oneshot moral hazard model in which agents perfectly obser...
Collusion sustainability depends on firms’ aptitude to impose sufficiently severe punishments in cas...
We study collusion within groups in noncooperative games. The primitives are the preferences of the ...
We study collusion within groups in non-cooperative games. The primitives are the preferences of the...
First published: 01 February 2018This is an open access article licensed under the Creative Commons ...
We study collusion within groups in non-cooperative games. The primitives are the preferences of the...
We study collusion within groups in non-cooperative games. The primitives are the preferences of the...
We study collusion within groups in non-cooperative games. The primitives are the preferences of the...
We propose a theory of collusive groups in the context of finite non-cooperative games. We consider ...
We propose a theory of collusive groups in the context of finite non-cooperative games. We first con...
We propose a theory of collusive groups in the context of finite non-cooperative games. We first con...
This dissertation consists of three essays in microeconomics and organization theory. These essays a...
The collusion incentive constraint is an important economic measure of cartel stability. It weighs t...
Collusion sustainability depends on firms’ aptitude to impose sufficiently severe punishments in cas...
A contract with multiple agents may be susceptible to collusion. We show that agents' collusion impo...
We analyze implications of collusion in a oneshot moral hazard model in which agents perfectly obser...
Collusion sustainability depends on firms’ aptitude to impose sufficiently severe punishments in cas...