In production economies with unequal labor skills, where the planner is ignorant to the set of feasible allocations in advance of production, the paper firstly introduces a new axiom, Nonmanipulability of Irrelevant Skills (NIS), which together with Maskin Monotonicity constitute the necessary and sufficient conditions for Nash implementation. Secondly, the paper defines natural mechanisms, and then fully characterizes Nash implementation by natural mechanisms, using a slightly stronger variation of NIS and Supporting Price Independence. Following these characterizations, it is shown that there is a Maskin monotonic allocation rule which is not implementable when information about individual skills is absent. In contrast, many fair allocati...
When environments are 'rich', single-valued social choice functions which are implementabl...
Abstract. This paper considers the issue of designing mechanisms whose Nash allocations and strong N...
In exchange economies with single-peaked preferences, we find that: (1) several solutions satisfy Th...
In production economies with unequal labor skills, where the planner is ignorant to the set of feasi...
In production economies with unequal labor skills, one of the intrinsic features for Nash implementa...
International audienceIn this paper we explore the problem of Nash implementation providing two new ...
In this paper, we consider production economies with possibly un-equal production skills and with th...
I consider the implementation problem under complete information and employ Nash equilibrium as a so...
We consider a simple production model and assume that the agents have unequal production skills that...
This paper deals with the problem of incentive mechanism design in non-convex pro-duction economies ...
We study Nash implementation by natural price-quantity mechanisms in pure exchange economies when ag...
Consider the problem of exact Nash Implementation of social choice correspondences. De\u85ne a mecha...
We study Nash implementation by natural price-quantity mechanisms in pure exchange economies with fr...
This article characterises the class of strategy‐proof and efficient rules in a labour production ec...
Haake C-J, Trockel W. On Maskin monotonicity of solution based social choice rules. REVIEW OF ECONOM...
When environments are 'rich', single-valued social choice functions which are implementabl...
Abstract. This paper considers the issue of designing mechanisms whose Nash allocations and strong N...
In exchange economies with single-peaked preferences, we find that: (1) several solutions satisfy Th...
In production economies with unequal labor skills, where the planner is ignorant to the set of feasi...
In production economies with unequal labor skills, one of the intrinsic features for Nash implementa...
International audienceIn this paper we explore the problem of Nash implementation providing two new ...
In this paper, we consider production economies with possibly un-equal production skills and with th...
I consider the implementation problem under complete information and employ Nash equilibrium as a so...
We consider a simple production model and assume that the agents have unequal production skills that...
This paper deals with the problem of incentive mechanism design in non-convex pro-duction economies ...
We study Nash implementation by natural price-quantity mechanisms in pure exchange economies when ag...
Consider the problem of exact Nash Implementation of social choice correspondences. De\u85ne a mecha...
We study Nash implementation by natural price-quantity mechanisms in pure exchange economies with fr...
This article characterises the class of strategy‐proof and efficient rules in a labour production ec...
Haake C-J, Trockel W. On Maskin monotonicity of solution based social choice rules. REVIEW OF ECONOM...
When environments are 'rich', single-valued social choice functions which are implementabl...
Abstract. This paper considers the issue of designing mechanisms whose Nash allocations and strong N...
In exchange economies with single-peaked preferences, we find that: (1) several solutions satisfy Th...