Mechanism Design Theory for Dummies

This

Nobel prize is exactly the sort of thing that journalists have nightmares

about. They wake up early, and read a citation

from the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences giving the Economics prize to three

economists they’ve never heard of, for helping to develop an entire discipline

– mechanism design theory – that they’ve also never heard of. And

so if I were you I’d leave the MSM alone and head straight over to Marginal

Revolution, where Tyler and Alex are doing a great job of bringing us all up

to speed. Start

here, and then read more on Eric

Maskin, Roger

Myerson, and Leonid

Hurwicz. Or alternatively, you can try my own 98-word explanation of what

mechanism design theory is:

A mechanism is a framework, basically, within which one finds a market. Some

markets don’t need a mechanism to work well, but others do. For instance, let’s

say that you have a monopoly, and a regulator. The regulator sets up a framework

so that the monopoly doesn’t overcharge. Or let’s say you want to sell a very

illiquid asset like a rare and unique painting. An auction house will set up

a framework so that your painting can be monetized in a transparent manner.

Mechanism design theory is the science of structuring such frameworks in an

optimal manner.

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