Imagen de portada para Information Structures in Economics Studies in the Theory of Markets with Imperfect Information
Information Structures in Economics Studies in the Theory of Markets with Imperfect Information
Título:
Information Structures in Economics Studies in the Theory of Markets with Imperfect Information
ISBN:
9783642464478
Autor personal:
Edición:
1st ed. 1982.
PRODUCTION_INFO:
Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : Imprint: Springer, 1982.
Descripción física:
VIII, 240 p. online resource.
Serie:
Lecture Notes in Economics and Mathematical Systems, 196
Contenido:
Ch. 0. Introduction -- 0.1. Scope and Approach of the Book -- 0.2. Summary of Contents -- 0.3. Further Remarks and References -- I. Preliminaries -- Ch. 1. Information Structures -- Ch. 2. Examples of Information Structures -- Ch. 3. Some Game Theory -- II. Oligopolistic Markets with Imperfectly Informed Buyers -- Ch. 4. The Basic Model -- Ch. 5. Symmetric Market Structure with n Firms -- Ch. 6. Asymmetric Duopoly -- Ch. 7. Judging Quality by Price -- III. Sequential Futures Markets -- Ch. 8. The Model and Some Basic Properties -- Ch. 9. The Value of Information in Sequential Futures Markets -- Ch. 10. Generalizations -- References.
Síntesis:
This book is intended as a contribution to the theory of markets with imperfect information. The subject being nearly limitless, only certain selected topics are discussed. These are outlined in the Introduction (Ch. 0). The remainder of the book is divided into three parts. All results of economic significance are contained in Parts II & III. Part I introduces the main tools for the analysis, in particular the concept of an information structure. Although most of the material presented in Part I is not original, it is hoped that the detailed and self-contained exposition will help the reader to understand not only the following pages, but also the existing technical and variegated literature on markets with imperfect information. The mathematical prerequisites needed, but not explained in the text rarely go beyond elementary calculus and probability theory. Whenever more advanced concepts are used, I have made an effort to give an intuitive explanation as well, so that the argument can also be followed on a non-technical level (cf. e.g. the treatment of the "generic" viewpoint in Ch. 9). In the same spirit, discussion of mathematical assumptions is limited to those which have economic sig- ficance, whereas purely "technical" assumptions (like differentiability or integrability of certain functions) are usually made without comment whenever convenient. The logical interdependence of chapters is as follows: Ch. 3 . Ch. 1 /~I--=---- Ch. 4 Ch. 2 Ch. 8 ~I -=--- /"'-.... Ch.
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