Abstract Communication and no-communication versions of a two-stage principal-agent model are compared. The models contain a risk-averse agent and two sources of private information, a shock to preferences followed by a productive action. Both models are formulated as linear programs, which are then used to compute solutions to examples. In simple cases, a sufficient condition for communication to be valuable is derived. In these cases, communication improves risk-sharing in bad states of the world. In more complicated cases, computed examples demonstrate how communication may also alter labor supply. Further examples demonstrate how action and consumption lotteries may separate agents by their shock. Survey evidence and Þeld work on contra...
In this paper, we revisit the conventional view on efficient risk sharing that advance information o...
This paper offers a simple but rich framework to study communication subject to various constraints ...
In many economically interesting situations, individuals have different access to information. Effic...
We study games in which principals simultaneously post mechanisms in the presence of several agents....
We study games in which principals simultaneously post mechanisms in the presence of several agents....
We study competing mechanism games in which principals simultaneously design contracts to deal with ...
Abstract: This paper assumes that communication between the principal and each of his agents is priv...
This chapter considers the problem of fto \u85nd allocations that satisfy certain social goals when ...
Abstract: This paper discusses the game-theoretic foundations of the famous Principal-Agent model. T...
The purpose of this dissertation is to extend the communication model to a situation where the agent...
Abstract. In this chapter we examine the costs and benefits of sharing information, using a simple s...
This paper studies inforfferent preferences and a welfare maximizing decision maker who chooses the ...
This paper analyses in a simple global games framework welfare effects stemming from different commu...
This paper studies information transmission subject to anonymity requirements and communication in p...
This paper models the tradeoff, perceived by central banks and other pub- lic actors, between provid...
In this paper, we revisit the conventional view on efficient risk sharing that advance information o...
This paper offers a simple but rich framework to study communication subject to various constraints ...
In many economically interesting situations, individuals have different access to information. Effic...
We study games in which principals simultaneously post mechanisms in the presence of several agents....
We study games in which principals simultaneously post mechanisms in the presence of several agents....
We study competing mechanism games in which principals simultaneously design contracts to deal with ...
Abstract: This paper assumes that communication between the principal and each of his agents is priv...
This chapter considers the problem of fto \u85nd allocations that satisfy certain social goals when ...
Abstract: This paper discusses the game-theoretic foundations of the famous Principal-Agent model. T...
The purpose of this dissertation is to extend the communication model to a situation where the agent...
Abstract. In this chapter we examine the costs and benefits of sharing information, using a simple s...
This paper studies inforfferent preferences and a welfare maximizing decision maker who chooses the ...
This paper analyses in a simple global games framework welfare effects stemming from different commu...
This paper studies information transmission subject to anonymity requirements and communication in p...
This paper models the tradeoff, perceived by central banks and other pub- lic actors, between provid...
In this paper, we revisit the conventional view on efficient risk sharing that advance information o...
This paper offers a simple but rich framework to study communication subject to various constraints ...
In many economically interesting situations, individuals have different access to information. Effic...