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The Economics of Imperfect Information

This book provides a systematic presentation of new microeconomic theories of imperfect information.

Louis Phlips (Author)

9780521309202, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 24 February 1989

296 pages
23.4 x 15.2 x 2 cm, 0.52 kg

This book provides a systematic presentation of new microeconomic theories of imperfect information. Each chapter explores a particular type of informational asymmetry and reviews major papers. Wherever possible the theories are compared with experimental evidence. An extensive bibliography is included. Part I, statics, begins with an examination of how imperfect price or quantity information on the buyer's side provides new explanations of phenomena such as price dispersion and sales or resale price maintenance. A thorough discussion of private value auctions and common value auctions follows. Subsequent chapters investigate the links between uncertainty about personal characteristics and job signaling, incomplete insurance coverage, and credit rationing by banks. Part II, dynamics, relates the dynamics of collusion, predation, and market efficiency to the transmission, pooling, and aggregation of private information. Game theoretic findings and their implications for antitrust policy are included.

List of figures and tables
Preface
Acknowledgments
1. Preliminaries
Part I. Statics: 2. Asymmetric price information
3. Asymmetric quality information
4. Auctions
5. Signaling equilibria
Part II. Dynamics: 6. Oligopoly and collusion
7. Predatory pricing
8. Efficient double auctions
References
Index.

Subject Areas: Microeconomics [KCC]

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