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Myerson–Satterthwaite theorem

The Myerson–Satterthwaite theorem is an important result in mechanism design and the economics of asymmetric information, and named for Roger Myerson and Mark Satterthwaite.[1] Informally, the result says that there is no efficient way for two parties to trade a good when they each have secret and probabilistically varying valuations for it, without the risk of forcing one party to trade at a loss.

The Myerson–Satterthwaite theorem is among the most remarkable and universally applicable negative results in economics—a kind of negative mirror to the fundamental theorems of welfare economics.[citation needed] It is, however, much less famous than those results or Arrow's earlier result on the impossibility of satisfactory electoral systems.

Notation edit

There are two agents: Sally (the seller) and Bob (the buyer). Sally holds an item that is valuable for both her and Bob. Each agent values the item differently: Bob values it as   and Sally as  . Each agent knows his/her own valuation with certainty, but knows the valuation of the other agent only probabilistically:

  • For Sally, the value of Bob is represented by a probability density function   which is positive in the range  . The corresponding cumulative distribution function is  .
  • For Bob, the value of Sally is represented by a probability density function   which is positive in the range  . The corresponding cumulative distribution function is  .

A direct bargaining mechanism is a mechanism which asks each agent to report his/her valuation of the item, then decides whether the item will be traded and at what price. Formally, it is represented by two functions:

  • The trade-probability function,  , determines the probability that the item will be transferred from the seller to the buyer (in a deterministic mechanism, this probability is either 0 or 1, but the formalism also allows random mechanisms).
  • The price function,  , determines the price that Bob should pay to Sally. Note that the reported values are marked by   since they do not equal the real values.

Note that, thanks to the revelation principle, the assumption that the mechanism is direct does not lose generality.

Every agent knows his value and knows the mechanism. Hence, every agent can calculate his expected gain from the trade. Since we are interested in mechanisms which are truthful in equilibrium, we assume that each agent assumes that the other agent is truthful. Hence:

  • For Sally, the expected gain is the expected payment minus the expected loss from giving the object:
 
  • For Bob, the expected gain is the expected gain from getting the object minus the expected payment:
 

Requirements edit

Myerson and Satterthwaite study the following requirements that an ideal mechanism should satisfy (see also Double auction#requirements):

1. individual rationality (IR): The expected value of both Bob and Sally should be non-negative (so that they have an initial incentive to participate). Formally:   and  .

2. Weak balanced budget (WBB): The auctioneer should not have to bring money from home in order to subsidize the trade.

3. Nash equilibrium incentive compatibility (NEIC): for every agent, if the other agent reports the true value, then the best response is to report the true value too. In other words, no one should want to lie. Formally:   and  .

4. ex-post Pareto efficiency (PE): the item should be finally given to the agent who values it the most. Formally:   if   and   if  .

Statement edit

If the following two assumptions are true:

  • The intervals   and   have a non-empty intersection.
  • The probability densities for the valuations are strictly positive on those intervals.

then, there is no mechanism which satisfies the four properties mentioned above (IR, WBB, NEIC and PE).

Extensions edit

Various variants of the Myerson–Satterthwaite setting have been studied.

1. Myerson and Satterthwaite considered a single buyer and a single seller. When there are many buyers and sellers, the inefficiency asymptotically disappears.[2] However, this is only true in the case of private goods; in the case of public goods the inefficiency is aggravated when the number of agents becomes large.[3][4]

2. Myerson and Satterthwaite considered an asymmetric initial situation, in the sense that at the outset one party has 100% of the good and the other party has 0% of the good. It has been shown that ex post efficiency can be attained if initially both parties own 50% of the good to be traded.[5][6]

3. The latter result has been extended to settings in which the parties can make unobservable ex ante investments in order to increase their own valuations.[7][8] Yet, ex post efficiency cannot be achieved if the seller's unobservable investment increases the buyer's valuation, even if only the buyer has private information about his or her valuation.[9][10]

4. Another impossibility result where only one party has private information about its valuation can be shown to hold when the outside option payoffs are not exogenously given.[11]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Myerson, Roger B.; Mark A. Satterthwaite (1983). "Efficient Mechanisms for Bilateral Trading" (PDF). Journal of Economic Theory. 29 (2): 265–281. doi:10.1016/0022-0531(83)90048-0. hdl:10419/220829.
  2. ^ Rustichini, Aldo; Satterthwaite, Mark A.; Williams, Steven R. (1994). "Convergence to Efficiency in a Simple Market with Incomplete Information" (PDF). Econometrica. 62 (5): 1041–1063. doi:10.2307/2951506. JSTOR 2951506.
  3. ^ Rob, Rafael (1989). "Pollution claim settlements under private information". Journal of Economic Theory. 47 (2): 307–333. doi:10.1016/0022-0531(89)90022-7.
  4. ^ Mailath, George J.; Postlewaite, Andrew (1990). "Asymmetric Information Bargaining Problems with Many Agents". The Review of Economic Studies. 57 (3): 351–367. doi:10.2307/2298018. ISSN 0034-6527. JSTOR 2298018.
  5. ^ Cramton, Peter; Gibbons, Robert; Klemperer, Paul (1987). "Dissolving a Partnership Efficiently". Econometrica. 55 (3): 615–632. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.456.4564. doi:10.2307/1913602. JSTOR 1913602.
  6. ^ Segal, Ilya; Whinston, Michael D. (2011). "A simple status quo that ensures participation (with application to efficient bargaining)". Theoretical Economics. 6 (1): 109–125. doi:10.3982/TE591. hdl:10419/150149. ISSN 1555-7561.
  7. ^ Schmitz, Patrick W. (2002). "Simple contracts, renegotiation under asymmetric information, and the hold-up problem" (PDF). European Economic Review. 46 (1): 169–188. doi:10.1016/S0014-2921(01)00088-5.
  8. ^ Rogerson, William P. (1992). "Contractual Solutions to the Hold-Up Problem" (PDF). The Review of Economic Studies. 59 (4): 777–793. doi:10.2307/2297997. hdl:10419/221232. ISSN 0034-6527. JSTOR 2297997.
  9. ^ Schmitz, Patrick W. (2002). "On the Interplay of Hidden Action and Hidden Information in Simple Bilateral Trading Problems". Journal of Economic Theory. 103 (2): 444–460. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.584.1856. doi:10.1006/jeth.2001.2790.
  10. ^ Aghion, Philippe; Fudenberg, Drew; Holden, Richard; Kunimoto, Takashi; Tercieux, Olivier (2012). "Subgame-Perfect Implementation Under Information Perturbations*". The Quarterly Journal of Economics. 127 (4). Section V. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.224.2883. doi:10.1093/qje/qjs026. ISSN 0033-5533.
  11. ^ Klibanoff, Peter; Morduch, Jonathan (1995). "Decentralization, Externalities, and Efficiency" (PDF). The Review of Economic Studies. 62 (2): 223–247. doi:10.2307/2297803. ISSN 0034-6527. JSTOR 2297803.

myerson, satterthwaite, theorem, important, result, mechanism, design, economics, asymmetric, information, named, roger, myerson, mark, satterthwaite, informally, result, says, that, there, efficient, parties, trade, good, when, they, each, have, secret, proba. The Myerson Satterthwaite theorem is an important result in mechanism design and the economics of asymmetric information and named for Roger Myerson and Mark Satterthwaite 1 Informally the result says that there is no efficient way for two parties to trade a good when they each have secret and probabilistically varying valuations for it without the risk of forcing one party to trade at a loss The Myerson Satterthwaite theorem is among the most remarkable and universally applicable negative results in economics a kind of negative mirror to the fundamental theorems of welfare economics citation needed It is however much less famous than those results or Arrow s earlier result on the impossibility of satisfactory electoral systems Contents 1 Notation 2 Requirements 3 Statement 4 Extensions 5 See also 6 ReferencesNotation editThere are two agents Sally the seller and Bob the buyer Sally holds an item that is valuable for both her and Bob Each agent values the item differently Bob values it as vB displaystyle v B nbsp and Sally as vS displaystyle v S nbsp Each agent knows his her own valuation with certainty but knows the valuation of the other agent only probabilistically For Sally the value of Bob is represented by a probability density function fB displaystyle f B nbsp which is positive in the range B B displaystyle underline B overline B nbsp The corresponding cumulative distribution function is FB displaystyle F B nbsp For Bob the value of Sally is represented by a probability density function fS displaystyle f S nbsp which is positive in the range S S displaystyle underline S overline S nbsp The corresponding cumulative distribution function is FS displaystyle F S nbsp A direct bargaining mechanism is a mechanism which asks each agent to report his her valuation of the item then decides whether the item will be traded and at what price Formally it is represented by two functions The trade probability function t vB vS displaystyle t v B v S nbsp determines the probability that the item will be transferred from the seller to the buyer in a deterministic mechanism this probability is either 0 or 1 but the formalism also allows random mechanisms The price function p vB vS displaystyle p v B v S nbsp determines the price that Bob should pay to Sally Note that the reported values are marked by v displaystyle v nbsp since they do not equal the real values Note that thanks to the revelation principle the assumption that the mechanism is direct does not lose generality Every agent knows his value and knows the mechanism Hence every agent can calculate his expected gain from the trade Since we are interested in mechanisms which are truthful in equilibrium we assume that each agent assumes that the other agent is truthful Hence For Sally the expected gain is the expected payment minus the expected loss from giving the object US vS vS uB B B p vS uB fB uB duB vS uB B B t vS uB fB uB duB displaystyle U S v S v S int u B underline B overline B p v S u B f B u B du B v S int u B underline B overline B t v S u B f B u B du B nbsp dd For Bob the expected gain is the expected gain from getting the object minus the expected payment UB vB vB vB uS S S t uS vB fS uS duS uS S S p uS vB fS uS duS displaystyle U B v B v B v B int u S underline S overline S t u S v B f S u S du S int u S underline S overline S p u S v B f S u S du S nbsp dd Requirements editMyerson and Satterthwaite study the following requirements that an ideal mechanism should satisfy see also Double auction requirements 1 individual rationality IR The expected value of both Bob and Sally should be non negative so that they have an initial incentive to participate Formally US vS vS 0 displaystyle U S v S v S geq 0 nbsp and UB vB vB 0 displaystyle U B v B v B geq 0 nbsp 2 Weak balanced budget WBB The auctioneer should not have to bring money from home in order to subsidize the trade 3 Nash equilibrium incentive compatibility NEIC for every agent if the other agent reports the true value then the best response is to report the true value too In other words no one should want to lie Formally vs US vS vS US vS vS displaystyle forall v s U S v S v S geq U S v S v S nbsp and vB UB vB vB UB vB vB displaystyle forall v B U B v B v B geq U B v B v B nbsp 4 ex post Pareto efficiency PE the item should be finally given to the agent who values it the most Formally t vB vS 1 displaystyle t v B v S 1 nbsp if vB gt vS displaystyle v B gt v S nbsp and t vB vS 0 displaystyle t v B v S 0 nbsp if vB lt vS displaystyle v B lt v S nbsp Statement editIf the following two assumptions are true The intervals B B displaystyle underline B overline B nbsp and S S displaystyle underline S overline S nbsp have a non empty intersection The probability densities for the valuations are strictly positive on those intervals then there is no mechanism which satisfies the four properties mentioned above IR WBB NEIC and PE Extensions editVarious variants of the Myerson Satterthwaite setting have been studied 1 Myerson and Satterthwaite considered a single buyer and a single seller When there are many buyers and sellers the inefficiency asymptotically disappears 2 However this is only true in the case of private goods in the case of public goods the inefficiency is aggravated when the number of agents becomes large 3 4 2 Myerson and Satterthwaite considered an asymmetric initial situation in the sense that at the outset one party has 100 of the good and the other party has 0 of the good It has been shown that ex post efficiency can be attained if initially both parties own 50 of the good to be traded 5 6 3 The latter result has been extended to settings in which the parties can make unobservable ex ante investments in order to increase their own valuations 7 8 Yet ex post efficiency cannot be achieved if the seller s unobservable investment increases the buyer s valuation even if only the buyer has private information about his or her valuation 9 10 4 Another impossibility result where only one party has private information about its valuation can be shown to hold when the outside option payoffs are not exogenously given 11 See also editDouble auctionReferences edit Myerson Roger B Mark A Satterthwaite 1983 Efficient Mechanisms for Bilateral Trading PDF Journal of Economic Theory 29 2 265 281 doi 10 1016 0022 0531 83 90048 0 hdl 10419 220829 Rustichini Aldo Satterthwaite Mark A Williams Steven R 1994 Convergence to Efficiency in a Simple Market with Incomplete Information PDF Econometrica 62 5 1041 1063 doi 10 2307 2951506 JSTOR 2951506 Rob Rafael 1989 Pollution claim settlements under private information Journal of Economic Theory 47 2 307 333 doi 10 1016 0022 0531 89 90022 7 Mailath George J Postlewaite Andrew 1990 Asymmetric Information Bargaining Problems with Many Agents The Review of Economic Studies 57 3 351 367 doi 10 2307 2298018 ISSN 0034 6527 JSTOR 2298018 Cramton Peter Gibbons Robert Klemperer Paul 1987 Dissolving a Partnership Efficiently Econometrica 55 3 615 632 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 456 4564 doi 10 2307 1913602 JSTOR 1913602 Segal Ilya Whinston Michael D 2011 A simple status quo that ensures participation with application to efficient bargaining Theoretical Economics 6 1 109 125 doi 10 3982 TE591 hdl 10419 150149 ISSN 1555 7561 Schmitz Patrick W 2002 Simple contracts renegotiation under asymmetric information and the hold up problem PDF European Economic Review 46 1 169 188 doi 10 1016 S0014 2921 01 00088 5 Rogerson William P 1992 Contractual Solutions to the Hold Up Problem PDF The Review of Economic Studies 59 4 777 793 doi 10 2307 2297997 hdl 10419 221232 ISSN 0034 6527 JSTOR 2297997 Schmitz Patrick W 2002 On the Interplay of Hidden Action and Hidden Information in Simple Bilateral Trading Problems Journal of Economic Theory 103 2 444 460 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 584 1856 doi 10 1006 jeth 2001 2790 Aghion Philippe Fudenberg Drew Holden Richard Kunimoto Takashi Tercieux Olivier 2012 Subgame Perfect Implementation Under Information Perturbations The Quarterly Journal of Economics 127 4 Section V CiteSeerX 10 1 1 224 2883 doi 10 1093 qje qjs026 ISSN 0033 5533 Klibanoff Peter Morduch Jonathan 1995 Decentralization Externalities and Efficiency PDF The Review of Economic Studies 62 2 223 247 doi 10 2307 2297803 ISSN 0034 6527 JSTOR 2297803 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Myerson Satterthwaite theorem amp oldid 1193263511, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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