scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Full extraction of the surplus in bayesian and dominant strategy auctions

Jacques Cremer, +1 more
- 01 Nov 1988 - 
- Vol. 56, Iss: 6, pp 1247-1257
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this article, the authors consider auctions for a single indivisible object, in which the bidders have information about each other which is not available to the seller and show that the seller can use this information to his own benefit, and completely characterize the environ- ments in which a well chosen auction gives him the same expected payoff as that obtainable were he able to sell the object with full information about the bidder's willingness to pay.
Abstract
We consider auctions for a single indivisible object, in the case where the bidders have information about each other which is not available to the seller. We show that the seller can use this information to his own benefit, and we completely characterize the environ- ments in which a well chosen auction gives him the same expected payoff as that obtainable were he able to sell the object with full information about each bidder's willingness to pay. We provide this characterization for auctions in which the bidders have dominant strate- gies, and for those where the relevant equilibrium concept is Bayesian Nash. In both set-ups, the existence of these auctions hinges on the possibility of constructing lotteries with the correct properties. WE CONSIDER the situation in which an agent, the seller, possesses one indivisible unit of a good to which he attaches no value. But the good has value to a number of potential buyers, and its transfer to one of them would increase social welfare. In particular, the transfer to the buyer with the highest valuation maximizes social welfare. In this paper, we completely characterize environments in which the seller can design an auction that will enable him to capture for himself the full increase in social welfare induced by the transfer of the good to the bidder with the highest willingness to pay. If the seller had full information about the reservation prices of potential buyers, his optimal selling strategy would be very simple. He would announce a price equal or very close to the highest reservation value. The optimal strategy for the bidder with the highest evaluation would be to accept the offer. (Note that we are treating a situation in which the seller can commit himself to a price.) As a result of the exchange, the utility of the seller increases by the full amount of the increase in social welfare, and he has been able to fully extract the surplus. In many circumstances, however, a seller has only imperfect knowledge of the buyers' willingnesses to pay. In this case, he must find some mechanism, or auction, which will enable him to maximize his benefit from the sale of the object. The auction literature starts with this observation and shows how the seller can, by an astute choice of auction, extract the largest possible fraction of the surplus. In general, the literature has shown that this proportion is strictly less than one. In some circumstances, the bidders will have information about each other which is not available to the seller. For instance, in auctions for petroleum drilling rights, bidders know the results of geological tests which they have

read more

Citations
More filters
Posted Content

Delegating Investment in a Common-Value Project

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose a common value project with the goal of delegating investment in a common-value project, which is similar to the one we present in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Collective Decision Through an Intermediary

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that an imperfectly informed intermediary can help achieve an ex post efficient decision in the provision of public goods and propose a cross-subsidization mechanism that implements an efficient decision.
Book ChapterDOI

Technological Change and Market Design

TL;DR: In this paper, the relationship between technological change and market design with an emphasis on new questions for market design theory is discussed, based on examples drawn from recent advances in medical, electricity, car, computing, and data collection technologies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Implementation with Interdependent Valuations (Second Version)

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that truthful revelation is an approximate ex post equilibrium for private value choice problems and that in replicated settings aggregate payments sufficient to induce truthful revelation go to zero, and that when agents are informationally small, there exist small modifications to CGV that restore incentive compatibility.

Affiliation and the Revenue Ranking of Auctions ∗ (Preliminary version) †

TL;DR: In this paper, necessary and sufficient conditions for existence of a pure strategy equilibrium for first price private value auctions where types may have any kind of dependence are given for a set of distributions which is dense in the set of all symmetric distributions with a density function.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Optimal Auction Design

TL;DR: Optimal auctions are derived for a wide class of auction design problems when the seller has imperfect information about how much the buyers might be willing to pay for the object.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optimal Selling Strategies under Uncertainty for a Discriminating Monopolist when Demands are Interdependent

Jacques Cremer, +1 more
- 01 Mar 1985 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the optimal design of resource allocation mechanisms in the presence of asymmetric information was studied and sufficient conditions were provided under which the seller can extract the full surplus from the buyers in an "ex post Nash" equilibrium.
Journal ArticleDOI

Groves' scheme on restricted domains

Bengt Holmstrom
- 01 Sep 1979 - 
TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that Groves' scheme is unique on restricted domains which are convex, in particular convex domains, and this generalizes earlier uniqueness results by Green and Laffont and Walker.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optimal contracts with public ex post information

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors derive necessary and sufficient conditions for a public ex post signal (s ∈ S) that is correlated with the risk-neutral seller's costs to render the initial information asymmetry inconsequential to the buyer.