Book contents
- Frontmatter
- 1 Foundations of game theory
- 2 Refinements of Nash equilibrium
- 3 Explaining cooperation and commitment in repeated games
- 4 Repeated games: cooperation and rationality
- 5 Implementation, contracts, and renegotiation in environments with complete information
- 6 Implementation in Bayesian equilibrium: the multiple equilibrium problem in mechanism design
5 - Implementation, contracts, and renegotiation in environments with complete information
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 January 2013
- Frontmatter
- 1 Foundations of game theory
- 2 Refinements of Nash equilibrium
- 3 Explaining cooperation and commitment in repeated games
- 4 Repeated games: cooperation and rationality
- 5 Implementation, contracts, and renegotiation in environments with complete information
- 6 Implementation in Bayesian equilibrium: the multiple equilibrium problem in mechanism design
Summary
READER'S GUIDE
Part one of the chapter is written in an easy style, to try to demystify the subject (it is based on the lecture given at the World Congress). The Biblical story of the Judgement of Solomon is used as a running example for presenting different notions of implementation. Inevitably, perhaps, this part of the chapter contains a number of statements that are rather loose. This is compensated for by the more formal part two, which amplifies certain results and topics - though here, too, some degree of detail has been sacrificed for the sake of readability.
The chapter deals with situations in which agents are presumed to have complete information about each other's preferences. Thomas Palfrey's chapter in this volume, “Implementation in Bayesian Equilibrium: The Multiple Equilibrium Problem in Mechanism Design,” is a companion to this, and looks at environments with incomplete information.
Even though the complete-information environment is a restrictive case, the literature on it is vast and still growing. I have therefore had to be quite selective. The chapter should be seen as an overview of recent research, not as a comprehensive survey; I regret that I have not been able to do justice to the work of a number of authors.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Advances in Economic TheorySixth World Congress, pp. 182 - 282Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1993
- 44
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