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Jan 24 Seminar: Stephan Lauermann

Date: 
Thu, 01/24/2008 - 11:00am - 12:30pm
Seminar Information: 

Stephan Lauermann

Assistant Professor of Economics, UM

"Dynamic Matching and Bargaining Games: A General Approach"

Stephan Lauermann 1/24 seminar streaming audio file 

Location: 

4-5:30 pm
UM: 411 West Hall
WSU: 313 State Hall (via videoconference)

Seminar Description: 

In a dynamic matching and bargaining game, a large population of traders interacts repeatedly in a decentralized market. Every trading period, traders are matched to form small groups where they bargain over the terms of trade. If they fail to reach an agreement, at some cost they can wait until the next period to be rematched into a new group. These waiting costs are the frictions of trading in the decentralized market. A major question in the literature concerns the trading outcome when frictions become small: Will the outcome become efficient? Ideally, one would like not only to find answers for particular trading institutions but also to gain a general understanding of the conditions under which trading with vanishing frictions has this property and the conditions under which it does not. This is the task of this paper. Its primary goal is to provide a general, "detail free" framework for the analysis of decentralized markets. The paper can be found at http://www-personal.umich.edu/~slauerma/lauermann_general_approach.pdf.

Stephan Lauermann
Seminar Speaker Bio: 

Stephan Lauermann received his PhD at the University of Bonn, before moving to Ann Arbor. His research has concentrated primarily on decentralized markets and the effect of frictions such as cost of searching for trading partners. Past work has shown when and why decentralized markets are efficient if trading frictions are small. He has also studied leniency programs in antitrust and how they affect the strategic risk of cartel agreements.

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Lauermann pdf of slides223.92 KB