We characterize competitive equilibrium in markets (financial etc.) where price taking Bayesian decision makers screen to accept or reject applicants. Unlike signaling models, equilibrium fails to resolve imperfect information. In classical statistics terminology, some qualified applicants are rejected (type I error) and some unqualified applicants are accepted (type II error). We report three new results: i. optimal firm behavior is deduced to be a Bayesian variant of the Neyman-Pearson theorem; ii. competitive equilibrium entails screening if and only if (net of screening costs) the cost of type II errors exceed the cost of type I errors, i.e. contrary to signaling (where buyers identify more qualified applicants who self screen to differentiat...
We consider a market-for-lemons model where the seller is a price setter, and, in addition to observ...
We examine equilibria in the sense of Rothschild and Stiglitz (1976) in competitive insurance market...
We characterize the optimal screening mechanism for a monopolist facing consumers who have privately...
We characterize competitive equilibrium in markets (financial etc.) where price taking Bayesian decis...
We build a theory of second-degree price discrimination under imperfect competition that allows us t...
Frictionless consumer choices and price competition are often associated with competitive markets an...
The first chapter studies screening competition under flexible information acquisition and its interac...
In a model of pairwise trade where traders of different sizes arrive sequentially on the market, the...
Utilizing a simple screening model, we explain how the provision of screening services alters equili...
This paper studies the competitive equilibrium outcome in decentralized asset markets when both sear...
The two games that are typically used to model markets with asymmetric information are the signallin...
I model financial markets that structure decision-making into discrete points separating contract offe...
We examine equilibria in competitive insurance markets with adverse selection when wealth difference...
Extreme adverse selection arises when private information has unbounded NEWLINE support, and market ...
We examine equilibria in competitive insurance markets with adverse selection when wealth difference...
We consider a market-for-lemons model where the seller is a price setter, and, in addition to observ...
We examine equilibria in the sense of Rothschild and Stiglitz (1976) in competitive insurance market...
We characterize the optimal screening mechanism for a monopolist facing consumers who have privately...
We characterize competitive equilibrium in markets (financial etc.) where price taking Bayesian decis...
We build a theory of second-degree price discrimination under imperfect competition that allows us t...
Frictionless consumer choices and price competition are often associated with competitive markets an...
The first chapter studies screening competition under flexible information acquisition and its interac...
In a model of pairwise trade where traders of different sizes arrive sequentially on the market, the...
Utilizing a simple screening model, we explain how the provision of screening services alters equili...
This paper studies the competitive equilibrium outcome in decentralized asset markets when both sear...
The two games that are typically used to model markets with asymmetric information are the signallin...
I model financial markets that structure decision-making into discrete points separating contract offe...
We examine equilibria in competitive insurance markets with adverse selection when wealth difference...
Extreme adverse selection arises when private information has unbounded NEWLINE support, and market ...
We examine equilibria in competitive insurance markets with adverse selection when wealth difference...
We consider a market-for-lemons model where the seller is a price setter, and, in addition to observ...
We examine equilibria in the sense of Rothschild and Stiglitz (1976) in competitive insurance market...
We characterize the optimal screening mechanism for a monopolist facing consumers who have privately...