This paper complements the traditional theory of teams (Fama (1980), Holmstrom (1982a,b)) by introducing endogenous team formation by agents who are concerned with their reputations and are informed about the types of their potential teammates. Such a situation leads to a tradeoff between joining a high-productivity type but a low-reputation partner. It is examined whether there are gains from trade, both, for the case of non-transferable and transferable utility, and what can be learned from reputation deals. Furthermore, a signaling model of teaming is developed that captures in a consistent way the process of information acquisition by the agents' strategic opponent, the market.N/
The evolution of cooperation has been the focus of intense research in the social sciences, natural ...
When there is an opportunity to gain a positive reputation, individuals are more willing to sacrific...
Reputation plays a key role among the mechanisms supporting cooperation in our society. This is a we...
This paper complements the traditional theory of teams (Fama (1980), Holmstrom (1982a,b)) by introdu...
Team production analysis are usually carried in static frameworks where employees choose neither the...
A human solution to the problem of cooperation is the maintenance of informal reputation hierarchies...
We investigate experimentally if endogenous partnership formation improves efficiency in social dile...
In dyadic models of indirect reciprocity, the receivers' history of giving has a significant impact ...
This is the pre-peer reviewed version of the following article: Bar‐Isaac, H. (2007), Something t...
In human societies, cooperation between strangers flourishes despite the risk of being exploited. Co...
We investigate experimentally if endogenous partnership formation can improve efficiency in social d...
Agents work for their own reputations when young but for their firms when old. An individual with a...
We study endogenous signaling in teams by analyzing a team production problem with endogenous timing...
Reputation plays a major role in human societies, and it has been proposed as an explanation for the...
It is standard in agency theory to search for incentive-compatible mechanisms on the assumption that...
The evolution of cooperation has been the focus of intense research in the social sciences, natural ...
When there is an opportunity to gain a positive reputation, individuals are more willing to sacrific...
Reputation plays a key role among the mechanisms supporting cooperation in our society. This is a we...
This paper complements the traditional theory of teams (Fama (1980), Holmstrom (1982a,b)) by introdu...
Team production analysis are usually carried in static frameworks where employees choose neither the...
A human solution to the problem of cooperation is the maintenance of informal reputation hierarchies...
We investigate experimentally if endogenous partnership formation improves efficiency in social dile...
In dyadic models of indirect reciprocity, the receivers' history of giving has a significant impact ...
This is the pre-peer reviewed version of the following article: Bar‐Isaac, H. (2007), Something t...
In human societies, cooperation between strangers flourishes despite the risk of being exploited. Co...
We investigate experimentally if endogenous partnership formation can improve efficiency in social d...
Agents work for their own reputations when young but for their firms when old. An individual with a...
We study endogenous signaling in teams by analyzing a team production problem with endogenous timing...
Reputation plays a major role in human societies, and it has been proposed as an explanation for the...
It is standard in agency theory to search for incentive-compatible mechanisms on the assumption that...
The evolution of cooperation has been the focus of intense research in the social sciences, natural ...
When there is an opportunity to gain a positive reputation, individuals are more willing to sacrific...
Reputation plays a key role among the mechanisms supporting cooperation in our society. This is a we...