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Transfers, contracts and strategic games

Transfers, contracts and strategic games. John Kleppe, Ruud Hendrickx, Peter Borm. Tilburg University. Ignacio García-Jurado. Universidad de Santiago de Compostela. Gloria Fiestras-Janeiro. Universidad de Vigo. The objective of this paper.

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Transfers, contracts and strategic games

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  1. Transfers, contracts and strategic games John Kleppe, Ruud Hendrickx, Peter Borm Tilburg University Ignacio García-Jurado Universidad de Santiago de Compostela Gloria Fiestras-Janeiro Universidad de Vigo

  2. The objective of this paper • This paper investigates the role of allowing certain aspects of commitment and cooperation within the framework of strategic form games. • More in particular, it focuses on the explicit strategic option of costless contracting on monetary transfer schemes with respect to particular outcomes. • Although the concepts and results in this paper can be readily extended to games with more players, we restrict our attention to two-player games. • Closely related to this paper are the following ones: A.Yamada (2003) Efficient equilibrium side contracts. Economics Bulletin 3, 1-7. M. Jackson and S. Wilkie (2005) Endogenous games and mechanisms: side payments among players. Review of Economic Studies 72, 543-566.

  3. Outline • Transfer equilibria • Strategic transfer contracts • Folk theorems

  4. Transfer Equilibria

  5. The transfer equilibrium concept

  6. An Example

  7. The transfer equilibrium concept

  8. Examples

  9. Examples

  10. Transfer equilibria in finite games

  11. Transfer equilibria in finite games

  12. Strategic Transfer Contracts

  13. The contracting model • We assume that before playing the game, the players know which particular allocations of earnings are available. • Then each player proposes a set of contracts. A single contract describes for one particular strategy combination a reallocation of the corresponding payoffs. • We specifically allow the players to propose contracts that discard money. • Only in case both players agree on the entire contract proposal, the game is modified according to the contract conditions.

  14. The contracting model

  15. The contracting model

  16. Examples

  17. Examples

  18. Examples

  19. Folk Theorems

  20. A Nash Folk Theorem

  21. A Subgame Perfect Folk Theorem • A Nash equilibrium is called subgame perfect if it prescribes a Nash equilibrium in every subgame. • The set of subgame perfect equilibria in the contract game is always empty (if m and n are greater than one). To see it simply consider a subgame starting at the node where both players have proposed the same collection of contracts in such a way that the modified game in the second stage possesses no Nash equilibrium (notice that this can easily be done). • The problem with the concept of subgame perfection in this particular model is that the game has too many subgames, some of which seem not particularly relevant. • To tackle this problem, the concept of virtually subgame perfect equilibrium can be considered. For a strategy profile s in an extensive form game G to be a virtually subgame perfect equilibrium, it must prescribe a Nash equilibrium in the s-relevant subgames of G. A subgame of G is called s-relevant if it is G itself or if it starts at a node that can be reached from a s-relevant subgame by at most one unilateral deviation from s. • The virtually subgame perfect equilibrium was introduced and studied in: I. García-Jurado and J. González-Díaz (2006) “The role of commitment in finitely repeated games”. Optimization 55, 541-553.

  22. A Subgame Perfect Folk Theorem

  23. Transfer, contracts and strategic games John Kleppe, Ruud Hendrickx, Peter Borm Tilburg University Ignacio García-Jurado Universidad de Santiago de Compostela Gloria Fiestras-Janeiro Universidad de Vigo

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