We study a model in which heterogenous agents first form a trading network where link formation is costless. Then, a seller and a buyer are randomly selected among the agents to bargain through a chain of intermediaries. We determine both the trading path and the allocation of the surplus among the seller, the buyer and the intermediaries at equilibrium. We show that a trading network is pairwise stable if and only if it is a core periphery network where the core consists of all weak (or impatient) agents who are linked to each other and the periphery consists of all strong (or patient) agents who have a single link towards a weak agent. Once agents do not know the impatience of the other agents, each bilateral bargaining session may involv...
This paper proposes a theory of intermediation in which intermediaries emerge endogenously as the ch...
Gauer F, Hellmann T. Strategic formation of homogeneous bargaining networks. Center for Mathematical...
Abstract We study a Rubinstein-Stahl two-player non-cooperative bargaining game played by n players...
We study a model in which heterogenous agents first form a trading network where link formation is c...
We study a model in which heterogeneous agents first form a trading network where link formation is ...
We study a model in which heterogeneous agents first form a trading network where linking costs are ...
We study an incomplete-information model of sequential bargaining for a single object, with the nove...
This paper presents a model of collusive bargaining networks. Given a status quo network, game is pl...
In many markets, goods flow from initial producers to final customers travelling through many layers...
I study a dynamic market-model where a set of agents, located in a network that dictates who can tra...
We study decentralized markets involving producers and consumers that are facili-tated by middlemen....
We study production networks in which firms match and sign bilateral contracts. Firms can buy from a...
We study an infinite horizon game in which pairs of players connected in a network are randomly matc...
This paper studies bargaining and exchange in a networked market with intermediation. Possibilities ...
Kominers thanks the National Science Foundation (grant CCF-1216095 and a graduate research fellowshi...
This paper proposes a theory of intermediation in which intermediaries emerge endogenously as the ch...
Gauer F, Hellmann T. Strategic formation of homogeneous bargaining networks. Center for Mathematical...
Abstract We study a Rubinstein-Stahl two-player non-cooperative bargaining game played by n players...
We study a model in which heterogenous agents first form a trading network where link formation is c...
We study a model in which heterogeneous agents first form a trading network where link formation is ...
We study a model in which heterogeneous agents first form a trading network where linking costs are ...
We study an incomplete-information model of sequential bargaining for a single object, with the nove...
This paper presents a model of collusive bargaining networks. Given a status quo network, game is pl...
In many markets, goods flow from initial producers to final customers travelling through many layers...
I study a dynamic market-model where a set of agents, located in a network that dictates who can tra...
We study decentralized markets involving producers and consumers that are facili-tated by middlemen....
We study production networks in which firms match and sign bilateral contracts. Firms can buy from a...
We study an infinite horizon game in which pairs of players connected in a network are randomly matc...
This paper studies bargaining and exchange in a networked market with intermediation. Possibilities ...
Kominers thanks the National Science Foundation (grant CCF-1216095 and a graduate research fellowshi...
This paper proposes a theory of intermediation in which intermediaries emerge endogenously as the ch...
Gauer F, Hellmann T. Strategic formation of homogeneous bargaining networks. Center for Mathematical...
Abstract We study a Rubinstein-Stahl two-player non-cooperative bargaining game played by n players...