This paper shows that coordination failure and contractual incompleteness can lead to socially excessive investment. Firms and workers choose investment levels, then enter a stochastic matching process. If investment levels are discrete, and match frictions are low, high-investing workers (firms) impose a negative pecuniary externality on any worker (firm) who cuts investment. Specifically, an agent cutting investment subsequently bargains with a partner with a binding outside option due to the fact that it can easily match with another high investor. The deviant thus bears the full loss in revenue from its action. However, given enough complementarity in investments, when one agent cuts investment it is efficient that its partner also does...
[eng] This study analyzes the welfare implications of requiring either unanimity or a simple majorit...
We consider a common investment project that is vulnerable to a self-fulfilling coordination failure...
We show that investment patterns often associated with agency and information problems can emerge as...
This paper shows that coordination failure and contractual incompleteness can lead to socially exces...
This paper shows that coordination failure and contractual incompleteness can lead to socially exces...
This paper analyzes the role and effects of public investment policy when coordination problems amon...
This paper shows that when agents on both sides of the market are heterogeneous, varying in their co...
This paper shows that when agents on both sides of the market are heterogeneous, varying in their co...
Individuals ’ inability to coordinate investment may significantly constrain economic de-velopment. ...
The corporate finance literature documents that managers tend to over-invest in their companies. A n...
Investment patterns often associated with agency and information problems can emerge as rational res...
This paper shows that under plausible assumptions, the inability of lenders to discover all of the r...
Do firms have proper incentives to invest in electronic coordination? We discuss this question in an...
We investigate how, in a situation with two players in which noncooperation is the only equilibrium,...
In Chapter 1, by using a simple model with moral hazard and managerial entrenchment, I derive the op...
[eng] This study analyzes the welfare implications of requiring either unanimity or a simple majorit...
We consider a common investment project that is vulnerable to a self-fulfilling coordination failure...
We show that investment patterns often associated with agency and information problems can emerge as...
This paper shows that coordination failure and contractual incompleteness can lead to socially exces...
This paper shows that coordination failure and contractual incompleteness can lead to socially exces...
This paper analyzes the role and effects of public investment policy when coordination problems amon...
This paper shows that when agents on both sides of the market are heterogeneous, varying in their co...
This paper shows that when agents on both sides of the market are heterogeneous, varying in their co...
Individuals ’ inability to coordinate investment may significantly constrain economic de-velopment. ...
The corporate finance literature documents that managers tend to over-invest in their companies. A n...
Investment patterns often associated with agency and information problems can emerge as rational res...
This paper shows that under plausible assumptions, the inability of lenders to discover all of the r...
Do firms have proper incentives to invest in electronic coordination? We discuss this question in an...
We investigate how, in a situation with two players in which noncooperation is the only equilibrium,...
In Chapter 1, by using a simple model with moral hazard and managerial entrenchment, I derive the op...
[eng] This study analyzes the welfare implications of requiring either unanimity or a simple majorit...
We consider a common investment project that is vulnerable to a self-fulfilling coordination failure...
We show that investment patterns often associated with agency and information problems can emerge as...