nep-des New Economics Papers
on Economic Design
Issue of 2024‒04‒01
three papers chosen by
Guillaume Haeringer, Baruch College


  1. Behavioral Mechanism Design as a Benchmark for Experimental Studies By David K Levine
  2. Optimality of weighted contracts for multi-agent contract design with a budget By Sumit Goel; Wade Hann-Caruthers
  3. Optimal Design of Climate Disclosure Policies: Transparency versus Externality By Shangen Li

  1. By: David K Levine
    Date: 2024–03–14
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:cla:levarc:786969000000001843&r=des
  2. By: Sumit Goel; Wade Hann-Caruthers
    Abstract: We study a contract design problem between a principal and multiple agents. Each agent participates in an independent task with binary outcomes (success or failure), in which it may exert costly effort towards improving its probability of success, and the principal has a fixed budget which it can use to provide outcome-dependent rewards to the agents. Crucially, we assume the principal cares only about maximizing the agents' probabilities of success, not how much of the budget it expends. We first show that a contract is optimal for some objective if and only if it is a successful-get-everything contract. An immediate consequence of this result is that piece-rate contracts and bonus-pool contracts are never optimal in this setting. We then show that for any objective, there is an optimal priority-based weighted contract, which assigns positive weights and priority levels to the agents, and splits the budget among the highest-priority successful agents, with each such agent receiving a fraction of the budget proportional to her weight. This result provides a significant reduction in the dimensionality of the principal's optimal contract design problem and gives an interpretable and easily implementable optimal contract. Finally, we discuss an application of our results to the design of optimal contracts with two agents and quadratic costs. In this context, we find that the optimal contract assigns a higher weight to the agent whose success it values more, irrespective of the heterogeneity in the agents' cost parameters. This suggests that the structure of the optimal contract depends primarily on the bias in the principal's objective and is, to some extent, robust to the heterogeneity in the agents' cost functions.
    Date: 2024–02
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:arx:papers:2402.15890&r=des
  3. By: Shangen Li
    Abstract: Does a more transparent climate disclosure policy induce lower emissions? This paper analyzes the welfare consequences of transparency in corporate disclosure regulation in an environment in which regulatory disclosure constitutes the sole avenue for the verification of a firm's emissions. On the one hand, a potential trade-off between disclosure transparency and externality suggests a non-monotonic relationship between them. On the other hand, increased transparency never makes the firm worse off. Consequently, mandating full disclosure is no different from maximizing the firm's private benefit while disregarding the ensuing externality. When the regulator is symmetrically informed about the firm's energy efficiency level, transparency beyond binary disclosure does not lead to welfare improvements. In the presence of information asymmetry, the welfare-maximizing disclosure takes a threshold form: all emissions above the threshold are pooled together, whereas all emissions below are fully disclosed.
    Date: 2024–02
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:arx:papers:2402.11961&r=des

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