A set of agents is aware of the existence of an economic opportunity, and compete for the associated prize. We study incentives to communicate about the existence of this economic opportunity to uninformed agents when the winner of the prize shares it with others, through some exogenous sharing rule. Communicating about the opportunity has two conflicting effects: it increases competition, but it can also increase the likelihood of receiving a large share of the prize. We find that, for any sharing rule, there is a minimum equilibrium, which Pareto dominates all other equilibria. We also find that under bilaterally symmetric sharing, more sharing generates more communication. We then discuss these results along several extensions
In this paper we study a model where non-cooperative agents may exchange knowledge in a competitive ...
Does competition among persuaders increase the extent of information revealed? We study ex ante symm...
In many economically interesting situations, individuals have different access to information. Effic...
A set of agents is aware of the existence of an economic opportunity, and compete for the associated...
We study the incentives to share private information ahead of con-tests, such as markets with promot...
We examine how risk-sharing is impacted by asymmetric information on the probability dis-tribution o...
We study the ex ante incentives for firms to share their private information in a Cournot duopoly wi...
In competing-mechanism games under exclusivity, principals simultaneously post mechanisms, and agent...
In competing-mechanism games under exclusivity, principals simultaneously post mechanisms, and agent...
In competing-mechanism games under exclusivity, principals simultaneously post mechanisms, and agent...
One of the most direct human mechanisms of promoting cooperation is rewarding it. We study the effec...
In competing-mechanism games under exclusivity, principals simultaneously post mechanisms, and agent...
One of the most direct human mechanisms of promoting cooperation is rewarding it. We study the effe...
One of the most direct human mechanisms of promoting cooperation is rewarding it. We study the effec...
One of the most direct human mechanisms of promoting cooperation is rewarding it. We study the effe...
In this paper we study a model where non-cooperative agents may exchange knowledge in a competitive ...
Does competition among persuaders increase the extent of information revealed? We study ex ante symm...
In many economically interesting situations, individuals have different access to information. Effic...
A set of agents is aware of the existence of an economic opportunity, and compete for the associated...
We study the incentives to share private information ahead of con-tests, such as markets with promot...
We examine how risk-sharing is impacted by asymmetric information on the probability dis-tribution o...
We study the ex ante incentives for firms to share their private information in a Cournot duopoly wi...
In competing-mechanism games under exclusivity, principals simultaneously post mechanisms, and agent...
In competing-mechanism games under exclusivity, principals simultaneously post mechanisms, and agent...
In competing-mechanism games under exclusivity, principals simultaneously post mechanisms, and agent...
One of the most direct human mechanisms of promoting cooperation is rewarding it. We study the effec...
In competing-mechanism games under exclusivity, principals simultaneously post mechanisms, and agent...
One of the most direct human mechanisms of promoting cooperation is rewarding it. We study the effe...
One of the most direct human mechanisms of promoting cooperation is rewarding it. We study the effec...
One of the most direct human mechanisms of promoting cooperation is rewarding it. We study the effe...
In this paper we study a model where non-cooperative agents may exchange knowledge in a competitive ...
Does competition among persuaders increase the extent of information revealed? We study ex ante symm...
In many economically interesting situations, individuals have different access to information. Effic...