This paper studies rigidities in sharing joint payoffs (non-transferability) as a source of excessive segregation in labor or education markets. The resulting distortions in ex-ante investments, such as education acquisition, link such mismatches to the possibility of simultaneous under-investment by the underprivileged and over-investment by the privileged. This creates an economic rationale for rematch policies like affirmative action, which have to be evaluated in terms of both incentives and the assignment quality. We compare a number of such policies that have empirical counterparts. Our results indicate that some of these policies can be beneficial on both equity and efficiency grounds
We study a situation where two players first choose a sharing rule, then invest into a joint product...
WP 2003-21 July 2003This paper presents a simple two-period, dual economy model in which migration o...
In this paper, we show a model with one-sided endogenous match efficiency. It is assumed that school...
This paper studies rigidities in sharing joint payoffs (non-transferability) as a source of excessiv...
Mobility depends essentially on investment, which often occurs in environments in which individuals ...
This paper attempts to explain the decrease and reversal of the education gap between males and fema...
This paper attempts to explain the decrease and reversal of the education gap between males and fema...
In October 2012 the Nobel prize was attributed to Al Roth and Lloyd Shapley for their work on matchi...
Does a competitive equilibrium in a matching market provide adequate incentives for investments made...
Societies are characterized by customs governing the allocation of non-market goods such as marital ...
We study frictionless matching models in large production economies. We provide necessary and suffic...
This paper shows that coordination failure and contractual incompleteness can lead to socially exces...
This paper studies how shifts in the distribution of quality on one side of the market affect earnin...
We study markets in which agents first make investments and are then matched into potentially produc...
Societies are characterized by customs governing the allocation of non-market goods such as marital ...
We study a situation where two players first choose a sharing rule, then invest into a joint product...
WP 2003-21 July 2003This paper presents a simple two-period, dual economy model in which migration o...
In this paper, we show a model with one-sided endogenous match efficiency. It is assumed that school...
This paper studies rigidities in sharing joint payoffs (non-transferability) as a source of excessiv...
Mobility depends essentially on investment, which often occurs in environments in which individuals ...
This paper attempts to explain the decrease and reversal of the education gap between males and fema...
This paper attempts to explain the decrease and reversal of the education gap between males and fema...
In October 2012 the Nobel prize was attributed to Al Roth and Lloyd Shapley for their work on matchi...
Does a competitive equilibrium in a matching market provide adequate incentives for investments made...
Societies are characterized by customs governing the allocation of non-market goods such as marital ...
We study frictionless matching models in large production economies. We provide necessary and suffic...
This paper shows that coordination failure and contractual incompleteness can lead to socially exces...
This paper studies how shifts in the distribution of quality on one side of the market affect earnin...
We study markets in which agents first make investments and are then matched into potentially produc...
Societies are characterized by customs governing the allocation of non-market goods such as marital ...
We study a situation where two players first choose a sharing rule, then invest into a joint product...
WP 2003-21 July 2003This paper presents a simple two-period, dual economy model in which migration o...
In this paper, we show a model with one-sided endogenous match efficiency. It is assumed that school...