This paper examines an exchange economy with heterogeneous indivisible objects that can be substitutable or complementary. We show that a competitive equilibrium exists in such economies, provided that all the objects can be partitioned into two groups, and from the viewpoint of each agent, objects in the same group are substitutes and objects across the two groups are complements. This condition generalizes the well-known Kelso-Crawford gross substitutes condition and is called gross substitutes and complements. We also provide practical and typical examples from which substitutes and complements are both jointly observed. Copyright The Econometric Society 2006.
We revisit the issue of existence of equilibrium in economies with indivisible goods and money, in w...
<p>We show that games of strategic complements, or substitutes, with aggregation are “pseudo-p...
This paper studies games with both strategic substitutes and strategic complements, and more general...
We study an exchange economy with indivisible objects that may not be substitutes for each other, an...
We study exchange economies in which objects are heterogeneous and indivisible, and may not be subst...
We propose new techniques for understanding agents’ valuations. Our classification into “demand type...
We show that, with indivisible goods, the existence of competitive equilibrium fundamentally depends...
We analyze an exchange economy in which (i) all commodities except money are indivisible, (ii) agent...
An Equivalence Theorem between geometric structures and utility functions allows new methods for und...
This note analyzes the effect of product complementarity in a bilateral oligopoly. We show that offe...
We prove a number of new theorems that offer sufficient conditions for the existence and uniqueness ...
We consider a finitely populated economy in which there are different types of agent, each agent is ...
We propose new techniques for understanding agents' valuations. Our classification into \demand type...
An integrated monopoly, where two complements forming a composite good are offered by a single firm,...
Abstract. We consider the problem of allocating indivisible goods us-ing the leading notion of fairn...
We revisit the issue of existence of equilibrium in economies with indivisible goods and money, in w...
<p>We show that games of strategic complements, or substitutes, with aggregation are “pseudo-p...
This paper studies games with both strategic substitutes and strategic complements, and more general...
We study an exchange economy with indivisible objects that may not be substitutes for each other, an...
We study exchange economies in which objects are heterogeneous and indivisible, and may not be subst...
We propose new techniques for understanding agents’ valuations. Our classification into “demand type...
We show that, with indivisible goods, the existence of competitive equilibrium fundamentally depends...
We analyze an exchange economy in which (i) all commodities except money are indivisible, (ii) agent...
An Equivalence Theorem between geometric structures and utility functions allows new methods for und...
This note analyzes the effect of product complementarity in a bilateral oligopoly. We show that offe...
We prove a number of new theorems that offer sufficient conditions for the existence and uniqueness ...
We consider a finitely populated economy in which there are different types of agent, each agent is ...
We propose new techniques for understanding agents' valuations. Our classification into \demand type...
An integrated monopoly, where two complements forming a composite good are offered by a single firm,...
Abstract. We consider the problem of allocating indivisible goods us-ing the leading notion of fairn...
We revisit the issue of existence of equilibrium in economies with indivisible goods and money, in w...
<p>We show that games of strategic complements, or substitutes, with aggregation are “pseudo-p...
This paper studies games with both strategic substitutes and strategic complements, and more general...