[This item is a preserved copy. To view the original, visit http://econtheory.org/] This paper studies bilateral trade in which the seller makes a hidden investment that influences the buyer's hidden valuation. In general it is impossible to implement both first-best efficient trade and efficient investment using budget-balanced trading mechanisms. The paper fully characterizes the constrained efficient contracts. It is shown that the optimal tradeoff between allocative efficiency and incentive provision results in rigidity in trade, the degree of which depends on the seriousness of the holdup problem. Sufficient conditions are also provided for full separation of buyer types to take place in optimal contracts when the holdup ...
Consider a seller and a buyer who write a contract. After that, the seller produces a good. She can ...
We introduce naive traders in bilateral trading. These traders report their true types in direct mec...
Investors making complementary investments typically do not have incentives to invest efficiently wh...
[This item is a preserved copy. To view the original, visit http://econtheory.org/] This ...
Summary This paper explores a version of the canonical holdup model where agents undertake specific ...
This work studies how the introduction of competition to the side of the market offering trading con...
This paper examines the efficiency of expectation damages as a breach remedy in a bilateral trade se...
We analyze a bilateral trade model where the buyer can choose the probability distribution of her va...
We analyze a bilateral trade model where the buyer chooses the distribution of her valuation for the...
A holdup model is analyzed in which one party, the seller, has an investment project that the other ...
A bilateral trading model with investment is considered. In the "cooperative" investment version of ...
A buyer and a seller can exchange one unit of an indivisible good. While producing the good, the sel...
In the hold-up problem incomplete contracts cause the proceeds of relation-specific investments to b...
Asymmetric information can impede socially efficient trade in bilateral transactions. This dissertat...
This paper makes two contributions in the context of seller-buyer relationships with bilateral relat...
Consider a seller and a buyer who write a contract. After that, the seller produces a good. She can ...
We introduce naive traders in bilateral trading. These traders report their true types in direct mec...
Investors making complementary investments typically do not have incentives to invest efficiently wh...
[This item is a preserved copy. To view the original, visit http://econtheory.org/] This ...
Summary This paper explores a version of the canonical holdup model where agents undertake specific ...
This work studies how the introduction of competition to the side of the market offering trading con...
This paper examines the efficiency of expectation damages as a breach remedy in a bilateral trade se...
We analyze a bilateral trade model where the buyer can choose the probability distribution of her va...
We analyze a bilateral trade model where the buyer chooses the distribution of her valuation for the...
A holdup model is analyzed in which one party, the seller, has an investment project that the other ...
A bilateral trading model with investment is considered. In the "cooperative" investment version of ...
A buyer and a seller can exchange one unit of an indivisible good. While producing the good, the sel...
In the hold-up problem incomplete contracts cause the proceeds of relation-specific investments to b...
Asymmetric information can impede socially efficient trade in bilateral transactions. This dissertat...
This paper makes two contributions in the context of seller-buyer relationships with bilateral relat...
Consider a seller and a buyer who write a contract. After that, the seller produces a good. She can ...
We introduce naive traders in bilateral trading. These traders report their true types in direct mec...
Investors making complementary investments typically do not have incentives to invest efficiently wh...