Economics Webinar - Simultaneous Search and Adverse Selection

3:00pm - 4:30pm
Online via Zoom

We study the effect of diminishing search frictions in markets with adverse selection by presenting a model in which agents with private information can simultaneously contact multiple trading partners. We highlight a new trade-off: facilitating contacts reduces coordination frictions but also the ability to screen agents' types. We find that, when agents can contact sufficiently many trading partners, fully separating equilibria obtain only if adverse selection is sufficiently severe. When this condition fails, equilibria feature partial pooling and multiple equilibria co-exist. In the limit, as the number of contacts becomes large, some of the equilibria converge to the competitive outcomes of Akerlof (1970), including Pareto dominated ones; other pooling equilibria continue to feature frictional trade in the limit, where entry is inefficiently high. Our findings provide a basis to assess the effects of recent technological innovations which have made meetings easier.

Event Format
Speakers / Performers:
Prof. Sarah Auster, University of Bonn
University of Bonn

https://www.econ.uni-bonn.de/en/department/professors/sarah-auster

Language
English
Recommended For
Alumni
Faculty and staff
PG students
Organizer
Department of Economics
Contact

Julie Wong by email: ecseminar@ust.hk

Post an event
Campus organizations are invited to add their events to the calendar.