A version of the Second Fundamental Theorem of Welfare Economics that applies to a money-free environment, in which a set of indivisible goods needs to be matched to some set of agents, is established. In such environments, "trade" can be identi fied with the set of hierarchical exchange mechanisms de ned by Papai (2000). Papai (2000)'s result – that any such mechanism yields Pareto-optimal allocations – can be interpreted as a version of the First Fundamental Theorem of Welfare Economics for the given environment. In this note, I show that for any Pareto-optimal allocation and any hierarchical exchange mechanism one can nd an initial allocation of ownership rights, such that the given Pareto-optimal allocation arises as a result of trade
There is a wide range of economic problems that involve the exchange of indivisible goods with no mo...
There is a wide range of economic problems involving the exchange of indivisible goods without monet...
International audienceThe second welfare theorem tells us that social welfare in an economy can be m...
A version of the Second Fundamental Theorem of Welfare Economics that applies to a money-free enviro...
We allocate agents to three kinds of hierarchical positions: top, medium, and low. No monetary trans...
Is the Pareto optimality of matching mechanisms robust to the introduction of boundedly rational beh...
We give a characterization of the set of group-strategyproof, Pareto-optimal, and reallocation-proof...
The set of Pareto improving trades can be characterized as a linear space spanned by a relative low ...
We consider an environment where agents must be allocated to one of three kinds of hierarchical posi...
The allocation and exchange of discrete resources, such as transplant organs, public housing, dormit...
Perhaps the single most enduring theme in economics is that of the social desirability of the compet...
We allocate agents to three kinds of hierarchical positions: top, medium, and low. No monetary trans...
This dissertation studies the problem of allocating heterogeneous indivisible goods to agents withou...
Allocation rules map preference profiles into allocations, whereas trading rules map preference prof...
We model an economy with social institutions that facilitate trade and induce three types of costs: ...
There is a wide range of economic problems that involve the exchange of indivisible goods with no mo...
There is a wide range of economic problems involving the exchange of indivisible goods without monet...
International audienceThe second welfare theorem tells us that social welfare in an economy can be m...
A version of the Second Fundamental Theorem of Welfare Economics that applies to a money-free enviro...
We allocate agents to three kinds of hierarchical positions: top, medium, and low. No monetary trans...
Is the Pareto optimality of matching mechanisms robust to the introduction of boundedly rational beh...
We give a characterization of the set of group-strategyproof, Pareto-optimal, and reallocation-proof...
The set of Pareto improving trades can be characterized as a linear space spanned by a relative low ...
We consider an environment where agents must be allocated to one of three kinds of hierarchical posi...
The allocation and exchange of discrete resources, such as transplant organs, public housing, dormit...
Perhaps the single most enduring theme in economics is that of the social desirability of the compet...
We allocate agents to three kinds of hierarchical positions: top, medium, and low. No monetary trans...
This dissertation studies the problem of allocating heterogeneous indivisible goods to agents withou...
Allocation rules map preference profiles into allocations, whereas trading rules map preference prof...
We model an economy with social institutions that facilitate trade and induce three types of costs: ...
There is a wide range of economic problems that involve the exchange of indivisible goods with no mo...
There is a wide range of economic problems involving the exchange of indivisible goods without monet...
International audienceThe second welfare theorem tells us that social welfare in an economy can be m...