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This first volume includes papers presented at the Eleventh World Congress of the Econometric Society, addressing topics such as dynamic mechanism design, agency problems, and networks.
List of contents
1. Dynamic mechanism design: robustness and endogenous types Alessandro Pavan; 2. Learning, experimentation and information design Johannes Hörner and Andrzej Skrzypacz; 3. Dynamic selection and reclassification risk: theory and empirics Igal Hendel; 4. Discussion of 'agency problems' Bernard Salanie; 5. Recent developments in matching theory and their practical applications Fuhito Kojima; 6. What really matters in designing school choice mechanisms Parag A. Pathak; 7. Networks and markets Sanjeev Goyal; 8. Econometrics of network models Áureo de Paula; 9. Networks in economics: remarks Rachel E. Kranton.
About the author
Bo Honoré is Class of 1913 Professor of Political Economy and Professor of Economics at Princeton University, New Jersey. He is Director of the Gregory C. Chow Econometric Research Program at Princeton University, and was formerly a member of the Board of Trustees of the Danish National Research Foundation. Honoré is a Fellow of the Econometric Society and conducts research in econometrics.Ariel Pakes is the Thomas Professor of Economics at Harvard University, Massachusetts. His research has been in industrial organisation, the economics of technological change, and in econometric theory. He is a fellow of the Econometric Society, and received the Frisch Medal of the Econometric Society in 1986. He is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the 2007 Distinguished Fellow of the Industrial Organization Society.Monika Piazzesi is the Joan Kenney Professor of Economics at Stanford University, California, and is also the Program Director of the National Bureau of Economic Research Asset Pricing Group. She conducts research in finance and macroeconomics, and is a fellow of the Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Econometric Society, and the Society of Financial Econometrics.Larry Samuelson is the A. Douglas Melamed Professor of Economics at Yale University, Connecticut, where he is also Director of the Cowles Foundation. His research is in economic theory, with an emphasis on game theory. He has served as a co-editor of Econometrica and the American Economic Review.
Summary
This first volume includes papers presented at the Eleventh World Congress of the Econometric Society, addressing topics such as dynamic mechanism design, agency problems, and networks.
Additional text
Advance praise: 'This manuscript collects the invited talks from the 2015 World Congress of the Econometric Society. The authors are leaders in their respective fields, and their talks provide a valuable overview of recent research. The collected papers emphasize the connection between theory and empirical practice.' Robert Porter, William R. Kenan, Jr Professor of Economics, Northwestern University, Illinois