An information-theoretic thought experiment is developed to provide a methodology for predicting endowment distributions in the absence of information on agent preferences. The allocation problem is first presented as a stylised knapsack problem. Although this knapsack allocation is intractable, the social planner can nevertheless make precise predictions concerning the endowment distribution by using its information-theoretic structure. By construction these predictions do not rest on the rationality of agents. It is also shown, however, that the knapsack problem is equivalent to a congestion game under weak assumptions, which means that the planner can nevertheless evaluate the optimality of the unobserved allocation
In a game with rational expectations, individuals simultaneously refine their information with the i...
We consider a variant of the Tullock lottery contest. Each player’s constant marginal cost of effort...
We consider implementation problems under incomplete information with-out incentive compatibility. I...
An information-theoretic thought experiment is developed to provide a methodology for predicting end...
It has long been recognized that agents\u27 expectations, in many instances, have a major impact on ...
This paper identifies several social choice correspondences which are or are not fully implementable...
This chapter deals with uncertainty and incomplete information in markets. It first considers situat...
This paper investigates the role of fairness, uncertainty, and a “veil of ignorance” in efficient re...
The objective of this paper is to endogenize the information structure of an agent in a standard mod...
In this paper we provide a characterization of the welfare properties of rational expectations equil...
Economic analysis containing agents with incomplete information is common in many fields of economic...
The paper reviews the main findings on individual decision making under time inconsistent preference...
We investigate the role of bounded rationality in asset pricing and information efficiency. We show ...
We criticize the R.E.E. approach to asymmetric information general equilibrium because it does not e...
This version: November 2000 (First Version: January 2000)Arrow's celebrated theorem shows that the a...
In a game with rational expectations, individuals simultaneously refine their information with the i...
We consider a variant of the Tullock lottery contest. Each player’s constant marginal cost of effort...
We consider implementation problems under incomplete information with-out incentive compatibility. I...
An information-theoretic thought experiment is developed to provide a methodology for predicting end...
It has long been recognized that agents\u27 expectations, in many instances, have a major impact on ...
This paper identifies several social choice correspondences which are or are not fully implementable...
This chapter deals with uncertainty and incomplete information in markets. It first considers situat...
This paper investigates the role of fairness, uncertainty, and a “veil of ignorance” in efficient re...
The objective of this paper is to endogenize the information structure of an agent in a standard mod...
In this paper we provide a characterization of the welfare properties of rational expectations equil...
Economic analysis containing agents with incomplete information is common in many fields of economic...
The paper reviews the main findings on individual decision making under time inconsistent preference...
We investigate the role of bounded rationality in asset pricing and information efficiency. We show ...
We criticize the R.E.E. approach to asymmetric information general equilibrium because it does not e...
This version: November 2000 (First Version: January 2000)Arrow's celebrated theorem shows that the a...
In a game with rational expectations, individuals simultaneously refine their information with the i...
We consider a variant of the Tullock lottery contest. Each player’s constant marginal cost of effort...
We consider implementation problems under incomplete information with-out incentive compatibility. I...