Implementation and Renegotiation
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Publication:4262862
DOI10.1111/1467-937X.00077zbMath0960.91025MaRDI QIDQ4262862
John Hardman Moore, Eric S. Maskin
Publication date: 4 June 2000
Published in: Review of Economic Studies (Search for Journal in Brave)
Related Items (31)
Intrinsic impediments to category captainship collaboration ⋮ Hard evidence and mechanism design ⋮ The theory of implementation when the planner is a player ⋮ On robust constitution design ⋮ Contractual solutions to hold-up problems with quality uncertainty and unobservable investments ⋮ Incomplete contracts, the hold-up problem, and asymmetric information ⋮ Information gathering and the hold-up problem in a complete contracting framework ⋮ On the value of partial commitment for cooperative investment in buyer-supplier relationship ⋮ Contract design and non-cooperative renegotiation ⋮ Implementation with renegotiation when preferences and feasible sets are state dependent ⋮ Mechanism design by observant and informed planners ⋮ Implementation in strong core by codes of rights ⋮ Implementation via mechanisms with transfers ⋮ Exit options in incomplete contracts with asymmetric information ⋮ Repeated implementation and complexity considerations ⋮ Implementation Theory ⋮ Nash implementation without no-veto power ⋮ Voluntary implementation ⋮ Evidence disclosure and verifiability ⋮ Nash implementation and uncertain renegotiation ⋮ Equilibrium participation in public goods allocations ⋮ Implementation of individually rational social choice functions with guaranteed utilities ⋮ Implementing cooperative solution concepts: a generalized bidding approach ⋮ Nash implementation via mechanisms that allow for abstentions ⋮ Optimal delay in committees ⋮ When manufacturers hold information back from strong suppliers ⋮ Bargaining power and renegotiation of small private debt contracts ⋮ On the interplay of hidden action and hidden information in simple bilateral trading problems ⋮ Deferred acceptance algorithm with retrade ⋮ The renegotiation-proofness principle and costly renegotiation ⋮ Contract and game theory: basic concepts for settings with finite horizons
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