We study a contract design setting in which the contracting parties cannot commit not to renegotiate previous contract agreements. In particular, we characterize the outcome functions that are implementable for an uninformed principal and an informed agent if, having observed the agent's contract choice, the principal can offer a new menu of contracts in its place. An outcome function can be implemented in this setting if and only if it is optimal for the principal for some belief over agent types which is more pessimistic, in the sense of the likelihood ratio order, than the prior. Furthermore, the outcome function cannot be too sensitive to variations in the agent's type. We show that the direct revelation mechanism which implements such ...
We characterize decision rules which are implementable in mechanism design settings when, after the ...
We characterize the optimal renegotiation-proof contract in a dynamic Principal-Agent model in which...
We study a mechanism design problem under the assumption that renegotiation cannot be prevented. We ...
We study a contract design setting in which the contracting parties cannot commit not to renegotiate...
It has been emphasized that when contracts are incomplete (e.g., because some relevant variables are...
We consider the problem of a principal who wishes to contract with a privately informed agent and is...
This paper considers a buyer-seller relationship with observable but unverifiable investments and/or...
Two parties may agree to a mutually binding contract that will govern their behavior after an uncert...
It is well known that non-renegotiable contracts with third parties may have an effect on the outcom...
By oering or choosing a contract the informed agent might reveal information to the principal which ...
This paper studies moral hazard contracts that may be renegotiated after an agent chooses an unobser...
We study contracting and costly renegotiation in settings of complete, but unverifiable information,...
The paper studies the implementation problem, first analyzed by Maskin and Moore (1999), in which tw...
This paper develops a theoretical framework for studying contract and enforcement in setting of comp...
Recent work in the field of mechanism design has led some researchers to propose institutional chang...
We characterize decision rules which are implementable in mechanism design settings when, after the ...
We characterize the optimal renegotiation-proof contract in a dynamic Principal-Agent model in which...
We study a mechanism design problem under the assumption that renegotiation cannot be prevented. We ...
We study a contract design setting in which the contracting parties cannot commit not to renegotiate...
It has been emphasized that when contracts are incomplete (e.g., because some relevant variables are...
We consider the problem of a principal who wishes to contract with a privately informed agent and is...
This paper considers a buyer-seller relationship with observable but unverifiable investments and/or...
Two parties may agree to a mutually binding contract that will govern their behavior after an uncert...
It is well known that non-renegotiable contracts with third parties may have an effect on the outcom...
By oering or choosing a contract the informed agent might reveal information to the principal which ...
This paper studies moral hazard contracts that may be renegotiated after an agent chooses an unobser...
We study contracting and costly renegotiation in settings of complete, but unverifiable information,...
The paper studies the implementation problem, first analyzed by Maskin and Moore (1999), in which tw...
This paper develops a theoretical framework for studying contract and enforcement in setting of comp...
Recent work in the field of mechanism design has led some researchers to propose institutional chang...
We characterize decision rules which are implementable in mechanism design settings when, after the ...
We characterize the optimal renegotiation-proof contract in a dynamic Principal-Agent model in which...
We study a mechanism design problem under the assumption that renegotiation cannot be prevented. We ...