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Jean Tirole

Researcher at University of Toulouse

Publications -  444
Citations -  109092

Jean Tirole is an academic researcher from University of Toulouse. The author has contributed to research in topics: Incentive & Market liquidity. The author has an hindex of 134, co-authored 439 publications receiving 103279 citations. Previous affiliations of Jean Tirole include Centre national de la recherche scientifique & École des ponts ParisTech.

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Using Cost Observation to Regulate Firms

TL;DR: In this article, the authors emphasize the use of accounting data in regulatory or procurement contracts when the supplier has superior information about the cost of the project and invests in cost reduction, and the main result states that, under risk neutrality, the supplier announces an expected cost and is given an incentive contract linear in cost overruns.
Posted Content

The Theory of Corporate Finance

TL;DR: The Theory of Corporate Finance as mentioned in this paper is an indispensable resource for graduate and advanced undergraduate students as well as researchers of corporate finance, industrial organization, political economy, development, and macroeconomics.
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Private and Public Supply of Liquidity

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors address the question: Do claims on private assets provide sufficient liquidity for an efficient functioning of the productive sector? Or does the state have a role in creating liquidity and regulating it either through adjustments in the stock of government securities or by other means?
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Incomplete contracts: Where do we stand?

Jean Tirole
- 01 Jul 1999 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors take stock of the advances and directions for research on the incomplete contracting front and illustrate some of the main ideas of the incomplete contract literature through an example, and offer methodological insights on the standard approach to modeling incomplete contracts; in particular, they discuss a tension between two assumptions made in the literature, namely rationality and the existence of transaction costs.
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Collective Moral Hazard, Maturity Mismatch, and Systemic Bailouts †

TL;DR: In this article, the authors characterize the optimal regulation, which takes the form of a minimum liquidity requirement coupled with monitoring of the quality of liquid assets, and establish the robustness of their insights when the set of optimal regulations is set.