Suppose that the goals of a society can be summarized in a social choice rule, i.e., a mapping from relevant underlying parameters to final outcomes. Typically, the underlying parameters (e.g., individual preferences) are private information to the agents in society. The implementation problem is then formulated: under what circumstances can one design a mechanism so that the private information is truthfully elicited and the social optimum ends up being implemented? In designing such a mechanism, appropriate incentives will have to be given to the agents so that they do not wish to misrepresent their information. The theory of implementation or mechanism design formalizes this “social engineering” problem and provides answers to the questi...
In this paper we consider a model in which agents have complete information about their neighbours a...
Agents are farsighted when they consider the ultimate results to which their own actions may lead to...
This thesis consists of three distinct chapters. In the first chapter I consider a production econom...
Abstract. Suppose that the goals of a society can be summarized in a social choice rule, i.e., a map...
We consider full implementation in abstract complete-information environments when agents have an ar...
The paper examines the communication requirements of social choice rules when the (sincere) agents p...
We consider agents who do not have any information about others' preferences. In this situation they...
This paper reconsiders implementation of social choice functions defined as mapping from states to c...
We generalize the canonical problem of Nash implementation by allowing agents to voluntarily provide...
It is well known that when players have private information, vis a vis the designer, and their prefe...
This surveys the branch of implementation theory initiated by Maskin (1977). Results for both comple...
We investigate implementation of social choice functions that map states to lotteries, where agents ...
We show that in oligopolistic markets the social choice correspondence which selects all socially ef...
Consider the problem of exact Nash Implementation of social choice correspondences. De\u85ne a lotte...
The dissertation is comprised of three distinct papers, linked primarily by their common basis in ga...
In this paper we consider a model in which agents have complete information about their neighbours a...
Agents are farsighted when they consider the ultimate results to which their own actions may lead to...
This thesis consists of three distinct chapters. In the first chapter I consider a production econom...
Abstract. Suppose that the goals of a society can be summarized in a social choice rule, i.e., a map...
We consider full implementation in abstract complete-information environments when agents have an ar...
The paper examines the communication requirements of social choice rules when the (sincere) agents p...
We consider agents who do not have any information about others' preferences. In this situation they...
This paper reconsiders implementation of social choice functions defined as mapping from states to c...
We generalize the canonical problem of Nash implementation by allowing agents to voluntarily provide...
It is well known that when players have private information, vis a vis the designer, and their prefe...
This surveys the branch of implementation theory initiated by Maskin (1977). Results for both comple...
We investigate implementation of social choice functions that map states to lotteries, where agents ...
We show that in oligopolistic markets the social choice correspondence which selects all socially ef...
Consider the problem of exact Nash Implementation of social choice correspondences. De\u85ne a lotte...
The dissertation is comprised of three distinct papers, linked primarily by their common basis in ga...
In this paper we consider a model in which agents have complete information about their neighbours a...
Agents are farsighted when they consider the ultimate results to which their own actions may lead to...
This thesis consists of three distinct chapters. In the first chapter I consider a production econom...