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Book Essays in Optimal Contracting Under Asymmetric Information

Download or read book Essays in Optimal Contracting Under Asymmetric Information written by Aaron Miruri Thegeya and published by . This book was released on 2010 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Essays in Optimal Contracting Under Asymmetric Information

Download or read book Essays in Optimal Contracting Under Asymmetric Information written by Aaron Miruri Thegeya and published by . This book was released on 2010 with total page 438 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Essays on Optimal Wage employment Contracts Under Asymmetric Information

Download or read book Essays on Optimal Wage employment Contracts Under Asymmetric Information written by Satyajit Ghosh and published by . This book was released on 1986 with total page 148 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Contractual Arrangements Under Asymmetric Information

Download or read book Contractual Arrangements Under Asymmetric Information written by Chongwoo Choe and published by . This book was released on 1994 with total page 218 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Essays in the Economics of Asymmetric Information

Download or read book Essays in the Economics of Asymmetric Information written by Fredrik Andersson and published by . This book was released on 1995 with total page 136 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Essays on Contract Theory

Download or read book Essays on Contract Theory written by Alice Peng-Ju Su and published by . This book was released on 2014 with total page 87 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This dissertation is primarily on the contractual design to account for various source of information asymmetry in a principal-agent(s) relationship. In the first chapter, I study the optimal provision of team incentives with the feasibility for the agents to coordinate private actions through repeated interaction with imperfect public monitoring. As the agents' imperfect monitoring of private actions is inferred from the stochastically correlated measurements, correlation of measurement noise, besides its risk sharing role in the conventional multiple-agent moral hazard problem, is crucial to the accuracy of each agent's inference on the other's private action. The principal's choice of performance pay to provide incentive via inducing competition or coordination among the agents thus exhibits the tradeoff between risk sharing and mutual inference between the agents. I characterize the optimal form of performance pay with respect to the correlation of measurement noise and find that it is not monotonic as suggested by the literature. In the second chapter, I study the optimal incentive provision in a principal-agent relationship with costly information acquisition by the agent. When it is feasible for the principal to induce or to deter perfect information acquisition, adverse selection or moral hazard arises in response to the principal's decision, as if she is able to design a contract not only to cope with an existing incentive problem, but also to implement the existence of an incentive problem. The optimal contract to implement adverse selection by inducing information acquisition, comparing to the second best menu, exhibits a larger rent difference between an agent in an efficient state and whom in an inefficient state. The optimal contract to implement moral hazard by deterring information acquisition, comparing to the second best debt contract, prescribes a lower debt and an equity share of output residual. With imperfect information acquisition or private knowledge of information acquiring cost, the contract offered to an uninformed agent is qualitatively robust, and that to the informed exhibits countervailing incentives. I relax the assumption of complete contracting and study truthful information revelation in an incomplete contracting environment in the third chapter. Truthful revelation of asymmetric information through shared ownership (partnership) is incorporated into the Property Right Theory of the firms. Shared ownership is optimal as an information transmission device, when it is incentive compatible within the relationship as well as when the relationship breaks, at the expense of the ex-ante incentive to invest in the relationship-specific asset as the hold-up concern is not efficiently mitigated. Higher (lower) level of integration is optimal with a lower marginal value of asset if the information rent effect is stronger (weaker) than the hold-up effect.

Book Three Essays in Contracting Under Asymmetric Information

Download or read book Three Essays in Contracting Under Asymmetric Information written by Ananish Chaudhuri and published by . This book was released on 1997 with total page 282 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Three Essays on Procurement Under Bargaining and Asymmetric Information

Download or read book Three Essays on Procurement Under Bargaining and Asymmetric Information written by Dimitrios Kostamis and published by . This book was released on 2007 with total page 318 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Essays on the Effects of Asymmetric Information

Download or read book Essays on the Effects of Asymmetric Information written by Mario Ramirez Basora and published by . This book was released on 2012 with total page 128 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: It can be easily argued that most, if not all, real economic settings are asymmetric in nature. Particularly, it is often the case that one or several agents possess more or better information than the rest when agreeing upon an economic transaction. Although the information economics revolution of the 1970s laid out the majority of the theoretical foundations, the effects of asymmetric information are subtle and have not been studied in some very interesting contexts, which motivate this thesis. In the first essay, which is based on joint work with Antonio Bento and Benjamin Ho, we study the problem of an uninformed regulator who wishes to use a voluntary price instrument under varying degrees of uncertainty, specifically in the context of a carbon offset market. In this scenario, a regulator offers private land owners a contract that compensates them for producing carbon offsets while minimizing adverse selection and welfare losses. The model shows that monitoring should decrease as the uncertainty of offset quality decreases, but should increase as uncertainty over agricultural productivity increases. Also, in response to those who argue that the problem of additionality is so large that carbon offsets should not be allowed in carbon regulation, the model quantifies the amount of additionality and finds that even in the case of a regulator with no information, welfare is improved by allowing offset contracts. Finally, the model offers guidance for calculating the optimal offset price as a function of the regulator's information. The second essay consists of a cardinal tournament used by a representative firm to choose its next CEO. Candidates are managers of different types: they are heterogeneous over levels of ability and risk aversion. The managers have private information about their ability. In this context, a two-dimensional solution set of levels of ability and risk aversion corresponding to each possible mean of cash flow realization is identified. Using two different specifications (CARA preferences with normally distributed cash flows, and CRRA preferences with log-normally distributed cash flows), the trade-off between managerial ability and risk aversion is found to be characterized by a concave function. Furthermore, for better levels of technology, the relative importance of risk aversion with respect to ability increases, while for worse levels of technology, the reverse holds. Finally, in the third essay, using a model based on the optimal consumption and investment models from the operations research literature, I study how the CEO characteristics studied in Chapter 2 impact dividend policy and the longrun evolution of the firm. Specifically, when assuming CRRA preferences and a concave trade-off between ability and risk aversion, I find that the optimal dividend policy of the CEO is non-monotonic with respect to risk aversion. In other words, CEOs with a combination of both high (or low) ability and risk aversion, will pay out lower dividend yields than CEOs with a more balanced combination of ability and risk aversion. Furthermore, firm survival is a function of the dividend yield and is also non-monotonic: while the probability of firm survival converges to either zero or one as risk aversion (and, by extension, ability) converges to either zero or infinity, there exists a range for which lower investment counteracts a potentially higher dividend yield, and the resulting change in the probability of survival is ambiguous.

Book Essays on Industrial Organization and Economics of Information

Download or read book Essays on Industrial Organization and Economics of Information written by Salvatore Piccolo and published by . This book was released on 2006 with total page 225 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: In my dissertation, I study equilibrium and optimal contracting between parties in relationships with asymmetric information. The welfare and private properties of incomplete contracting are analyzed both in imperfectly and perfectly competitive markets. The first essay analyzes the welfare effects of incomplete contracting in a principal-agent set-up. I study Resale Price Maintenance, a complete contract, and quantity fixing, an incomplete one, in a successive monopolies framework with information asymmetries. Both contracts entail a double marginalization driven by information rents distributed to the retailer. When firms behave non-cooperatively, the principal imposes retail price restrictions, and the impact of complete contracting on consumers' surplus is ambiguous. When, firms maximize ex ante joint profits, policy recommendations are unambiguous: if the preferred contracting mode from an ex ante viewpoint entails retail price restrictions, it also raises consumers' surplus, thereby producing a Pareto improvement relative to incomplete contracts. The second essay examines the welfare effects of contracting incompleteness when agents' preferences and productivity depend on their health status, and occupational choices affect individual health distributions. Efficiency requires agents of the same type to obtain different expected utilities if assigned to different occupations. Workers with riskier jobs get higher (lower) expected utilities if health affects production (consumption) capabilities. Competitive equilibria are first-best if complete contracts are enforceable, but typically not if only incomplete ones are traded. Compensating wage differentials are incompatible with ex-ante efficiency. The third essay provides a rationale for contracting incompleteness in a competing organizations set-up. I show that principals dealing with competing agents may leave contracts silent on some verifiable performance measures when certain aspects of agents' activity are noncontractible. Two effects are at play once one moves from a complete to an incomplete contract. First, reducing the number of screening instruments has a detrimental effect on principals' profits as it makes information revelation more costly. Second, it may create strategic value by forcing competing organizations to behave in a more friendly manner at the competitive stage.

Book Essays on Optimal Contracts with Overconfidence

Download or read book Essays on Optimal Contracts with Overconfidence written by Justin R. Downs and published by . This book was released on 2020 with total page 102 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This dissertation studies the effect of overconfidence on markets and organizations with asymmetric information. In the first chapter, I introduce overconfidence into a standard information gathering contracting model. A principal (she) hires an agent (he) to gather information about a project's cost before he implements the project, and the agent overestimates the probability of having a low implementation cost. The agent's overconfidence makes him more willing to sign the contract, but less willing to gather information, and increases in overconfidence may increase or decrease the principal's profit. In the second chapter, I study a labor market where firms hire overconfident workers who have private information about their productivity. I derive the optimal contracts for both a monopsonistic market, where one firm makes take-it-or-leave-it offers to the workers, as well as a competitive market, where many firms compete for the services of workers. Overconfidence causes the optimal contract to be distorted away from the efficient outcome in both markets, but a monopsonistic firm internalizes these distortions while a competitive firm does not. The main result is that monopsonistic markets can be more efficient than competitive markets. In the third chapter, I provide a review of several mathematical definitions of overconfidence used in the contract theory literature and apply them all to a generalized version of the information gathering model from Chapter 1. The effects overconfidence has on the agent's willingness to participate, to gather information, and on the principal's profit are all sensitive to the mathematical definition of overconfidence used in the model.

Book Essays on Incentives and Auditing Under Asymmetric Information in the New Issues Market

Download or read book Essays on Incentives and Auditing Under Asymmetric Information in the New Issues Market written by Joseph Bachar and published by . This book was released on 1987 with total page 298 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Essays on Economic Decisions Under Uncertainty

Download or read book Essays on Economic Decisions Under Uncertainty written by Jacques Drèze and published by CUP Archive. This book was released on 1990-05-25 with total page 460 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Professor Dreze is a highly respected mathematical economist and econometrician. This book brings together some of his major contributions to the economic theory of decision making under uncertainty, and also several essays. These include an important essay on 'Decision theory under moral hazard and state dependent preferences' that significantly extends modern theory, and which provides rigorous foundations for subsequent chapters. Topics covered within the theory include decision theory, market allocation and prices, consumer decisions, theory of the firm, labour contracts, and public decisions.

Book Incentive Contracts with Strategic Agents

Download or read book Incentive Contracts with Strategic Agents written by Jacques Paul Lawarrée and published by . This book was released on 1990 with total page 418 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Three Essays on Policy for the Optimal R D Procurement Under Asymmetric Information

Download or read book Three Essays on Policy for the Optimal R D Procurement Under Asymmetric Information written by Kim Weonseek and published by . This book was released on 2001 with total page 308 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Essays on Financial Markets with Asymmetric Information

Download or read book Essays on Financial Markets with Asymmetric Information written by Robert Lee Heinkel and published by . This book was released on 1978 with total page 362 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Essays in Accounting Theory in Honour of Joel S  Demski

Download or read book Essays in Accounting Theory in Honour of Joel S Demski written by Rick Antle and published by Springer Science & Business Media. This book was released on 2007-02-15 with total page 334 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The integration of accounting and the economics of information developed by Joel S. Demski and those he inspired has revolutionized accounting thought. This volume collects papers on accounting theory in honor of Professor Demski. The book also contains an extensive review of Professor Demski’s own contributions to the theory of accounting over the past four decades.