Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Introduction by the Editors
- Advances in Economics and Econometrics
- 1 The Economics of Social Networks
- 2 Multi-Contracting Mechanism Design
- 3 Allocative and Informational Externalities in Auctions and Related Mechanisms
- 4 The Economics of Relationships
- 5 Information in Mechanism Design
- 6 Communication in Economic Mechanisms
- 7 Advances in Dynamic Optimal Taxation
- 8 Quantitative Macroeconomic Models with Heterogeneous Agents
- 9 Modeling Inefficient Institutions
- 10 Whither Political Economy? Theories, Facts and Issues
- 11 Comments on Acemoglu and Merlo
- Index
- Titles in the series
5 - Information in Mechanism Design
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 January 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Introduction by the Editors
- Advances in Economics and Econometrics
- 1 The Economics of Social Networks
- 2 Multi-Contracting Mechanism Design
- 3 Allocative and Informational Externalities in Auctions and Related Mechanisms
- 4 The Economics of Relationships
- 5 Information in Mechanism Design
- 6 Communication in Economic Mechanisms
- 7 Advances in Dynamic Optimal Taxation
- 8 Quantitative Macroeconomic Models with Heterogeneous Agents
- 9 Modeling Inefficient Institutions
- 10 Whither Political Economy? Theories, Facts and Issues
- 11 Comments on Acemoglu and Merlo
- Index
- Titles in the series
Summary
INTRODUCTION
The mechanism design literature of the last thirty years has been a big success on a number of different levels. A beautiful theoretical literature has shown how a wide range of institutional design questions can be formally posed as mechanism design problems with a common structure. We can understand institutions as solutions to well-defined maximization problems subject to incentive constraints. Elegant characterizations of optimal mechanisms have been obtained. Market design has become more important in many economic arenas both because of newinsights from theory and developments in information technology. A very successful econometric literature has tested auction theory in practice.
The basic issue in mechanism design is how to truthfully elicit private and decentralized information in order to achieve some private or social objective. The task of the principal is then to design a game of incomplete information in which the agents have indeed an incentive to reveal the information. The optimal design depends on the common prior, which the principal and the agents share about the types of the agents. Unfortunately, the general theory, the applications and the empirical work have rather different natural starting points. The theoretical analysis begins with a given common prior, often over a small set of types, and then analyzes the optimal mechanism with respect to this prior. Yet, the fine details of the specified environment incorporated in the common prior are rarely available to the designer in practice.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Advances in Economics and EconometricsTheory and Applications, Ninth World Congress, pp. 186 - 221Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006
- 16
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