This paper examines the welfare properties of “beauty contest” games with rationally inattentive agents. Agents allocate attention between private and public signals to reduce the uncertainty about observation noises. In this setting, social welfare may not necessarily increase with the capacity to process information, and can actually decrease as a result of attention misallocation. Strikingly, social welfare can be even higher when agents possess a finite amount of capacity than when they have an infinite amount of capacity. We derive sufficient and necessary conditions under which multiple equilibria emerge and study the implications of equilibrium multiplicity for macroeconomic policies
In the context of a “beauty-contest ” coordination game (in which pay-offs depend on the quadratic d...
We study information acquisition in a coordination game with incom-plete information. To capture the...
overreaction to public information in beauty contest games, which leads to reconsidering the benefit...
This paper examines the welfare properties of “beauty contest” games with rationally inattentive age...
We examine how agents allocate attention between private and public signals to reduce the uncertaint...
We examine how agents allocate attention between private and public signals to reduce the uncertaint...
In games with strategic complementarities, public information about the state of the world has a lar...
Purpose: In games with strategic complementarities, public information about the state of the world ...
In games with strategic complementarities, public information about the state of the world has a lar...
We study information acquisition in a coordination game with incomplete information. To capture the ...
In the context of a “beauty-contest ” coordination game (in which pay-offs depend on the quadratic d...
The first chapter studies global games with interim information acquisition, where players acquire a...
This thesis contributes to the integration of limited attention within the economic theory. We argue...
This paper studies how the introduction of social learning with costs to delay affects coordination ...
In the context of a “beauty contest” coordination game (in which payoffs depend on the quadratic dis...
In the context of a “beauty-contest ” coordination game (in which pay-offs depend on the quadratic d...
We study information acquisition in a coordination game with incom-plete information. To capture the...
overreaction to public information in beauty contest games, which leads to reconsidering the benefit...
This paper examines the welfare properties of “beauty contest” games with rationally inattentive age...
We examine how agents allocate attention between private and public signals to reduce the uncertaint...
We examine how agents allocate attention between private and public signals to reduce the uncertaint...
In games with strategic complementarities, public information about the state of the world has a lar...
Purpose: In games with strategic complementarities, public information about the state of the world ...
In games with strategic complementarities, public information about the state of the world has a lar...
We study information acquisition in a coordination game with incomplete information. To capture the ...
In the context of a “beauty-contest ” coordination game (in which pay-offs depend on the quadratic d...
The first chapter studies global games with interim information acquisition, where players acquire a...
This thesis contributes to the integration of limited attention within the economic theory. We argue...
This paper studies how the introduction of social learning with costs to delay affects coordination ...
In the context of a “beauty contest” coordination game (in which payoffs depend on the quadratic dis...
In the context of a “beauty-contest ” coordination game (in which pay-offs depend on the quadratic d...
We study information acquisition in a coordination game with incom-plete information. To capture the...
overreaction to public information in beauty contest games, which leads to reconsidering the benefit...