This paper uses the complexity of non-competitive behaviour to provide a new justification for competitive equilibrium in the context of extensive-form market games with a finite number of agents. This paper demonstrates that if rational agents have (at least at the margin) an aversion for complex behaviours then their maximizing behaviour will result in simple behavioural rules and thereby in a perfectly competitive outcome. In particular, we consider sequential market games with heterogeneous sets of buyers and sellers and show that if the complexity costs of implementing strategies enter players� preferences, together with the standard payoff in the game, then every equilibrium strategy profile induces a competitive outcome. This is...
We study sequential bargaining in many-to-one matching markets. We show that there is an advantage t...
We study a simple sequential allocation mechanism for allocating indivisible goods between agents in...
In an earlier paper, we showed that a new complexity measure on strategies, response complexity, imp...
Rubinstein and Wolinsky (Rev. Econ. Stud. 57 (1990) 63-78) consider a simple decentralised market ga...
This paper extends the model developed in “Complexity and Competition” (Gale and Sabourian, Economet...
Rubinstein and Wolinsky (1990) show that a simple homogeneous market with exogenous matching has co...
A single seller of an indivisible object wishes to sell the good to one of many buyers. The seller h...
In an earlier paper, we showed that a new complexity measure on strategies, response complexity, imp...
We investigate the effect of introducing costs of complexity in the n-person unanimity bargaining ga...
In many settings agents participate in multiple different auctions that are not necessarily implemen...
We consider the problem in which n items arrive to a market sequentially over time, where two agents...
This paper considers the “negotiation game ” (Busch and Wen [4]) which com-bines the features of two...
When studying extensive-form games it is commonly assumed that players make their decisions individu...
This paper considers the “negotiation game ” (Busch and Wen [4]) which combines the features of two-...
We study many-to-many matching markets in which agents from a set A are matched to agents from a dis...
We study sequential bargaining in many-to-one matching markets. We show that there is an advantage t...
We study a simple sequential allocation mechanism for allocating indivisible goods between agents in...
In an earlier paper, we showed that a new complexity measure on strategies, response complexity, imp...
Rubinstein and Wolinsky (Rev. Econ. Stud. 57 (1990) 63-78) consider a simple decentralised market ga...
This paper extends the model developed in “Complexity and Competition” (Gale and Sabourian, Economet...
Rubinstein and Wolinsky (1990) show that a simple homogeneous market with exogenous matching has co...
A single seller of an indivisible object wishes to sell the good to one of many buyers. The seller h...
In an earlier paper, we showed that a new complexity measure on strategies, response complexity, imp...
We investigate the effect of introducing costs of complexity in the n-person unanimity bargaining ga...
In many settings agents participate in multiple different auctions that are not necessarily implemen...
We consider the problem in which n items arrive to a market sequentially over time, where two agents...
This paper considers the “negotiation game ” (Busch and Wen [4]) which com-bines the features of two...
When studying extensive-form games it is commonly assumed that players make their decisions individu...
This paper considers the “negotiation game ” (Busch and Wen [4]) which combines the features of two-...
We study many-to-many matching markets in which agents from a set A are matched to agents from a dis...
We study sequential bargaining in many-to-one matching markets. We show that there is an advantage t...
We study a simple sequential allocation mechanism for allocating indivisible goods between agents in...
In an earlier paper, we showed that a new complexity measure on strategies, response complexity, imp...