Essays in Behavioral Macroeconomics and Mechanism Design

Essays in Behavioral Macroeconomics and Mechanism Design

Author: Joel P. Flynn

Publisher:

Published: 2023

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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This thesis is in two parts. The first part of the thesis, "Essays in Behavioral Macroeconomics," is motivated by the simple observation that the macroeconomy is complicated; many households and firms interact across myriad markets in ways that change over time. This part of the thesis studies, empirically and theoretically, the microeconomic foundations and macroeconomic implications of hypotheses inspired by these complications: that people adopt simplified and misspecified narratives to understand the world; and that people will only pay attention to the macroeconomy when it is important to them. In the first chapter, "The Macroeconomics of Narratives" (coauthored with Karthik A. Sastry), we study the macroeconomic implications of narratives, or beliefs about the economy that affect decisions and spread contagiously. Empirically, we use natural-language-processing methods to measure textual proxies for narratives in US public firms' end-of-year reports (Forms 10-K). We find that: (i) firms' hiring decisions respond strongly to narratives, (ii) narratives spread contagiously among firms, and (iii) this spread is responsive to macroeconomic conditions. To understand the macroeconomic implications of these forces, we embed a contagious optimistic narrative in a business-cycle model. We characterize, in terms of the decision-relevance and contagiousness of narratives, when the unique equilibrium features: (i) non-fundamental business cycles, (ii) non-linear belief dynamics (narratives "going viral") that generate multiple stable steady states (hysteresis), and (iii) the coexistence of hump-shaped responses to small shocks with regime-shifting behavior in response to large shocks. Our empirical estimates discipline both the static, general equilibrium effect of narratives on output and their dynamics. In the calibrated model, we find that contagious optimism explains 32% and 18% of the output reductions over the early 2000s recession and Great Recession, respectively, as well as 19% of the unconditional variance in output. We find that overall optimism is not sufficiently contagious to generate hysteresis, but other, more granular narratives are. In the second chapter, "Attention Cycles" (coauthored with Karthik A. Sastry), we document that, in aggregate downturns, US public firms' attention to macroeconomic conditions rises and the size of their input-choice mistakes falls. We explain these phenomena with a business-cycle model in which firms face a cognitive cost of making precise decisions. Because firms are owned by risk-averse households, there are greater incentives to deliver profits by making smaller input-choice mistakes when aggregate consumption is low. In the data, consistent with our model, financial markets punish mistakes more in downturns and macroeconomically attentive firms make smaller mistakes. Quantitatively, attention cycles generate asymmetric, state-dependent shock propagation and stochastic volatility of output growth. In the third chapter, "Strategic Mistakes" (coauthored with Karthik A. Sastry), to study the equilibrium implications of decision frictions, we introduce a new class of control costs in continuum-player, continuum-action games in which agents interact via an aggregate of the actions of others. The costs that we study accommodate a rich class of decision frictions, including ex post misoptimization, imperfect ex ante planning, cognitive constraints that depend endogenously on the behavior of others, and consideration sets. We provide primitive conditions such that equilibria exist, are unique, are efficient, and feature monotone comparative statics for action distributions, aggregates, and the size of agents' mistakes. We apply the model to make robust equilibrium predictions in a monetary business-cycle model of price-setting with planning frictions and a model of consumption and savings during a liquidity trap when endogenous stress worsens decisions. The second part of this thesis, "Essays in Mechanism Design," studies two contentious issues in the allocation of resources in the modern economy: How should we account for diversity when we allocate resources in two-sided matching markets? How should digital goods and information be priced and regulated? In the fourth chapter, "Priority Design in Centralized Matching Markets" (coauthored with Oğuzhan C̦elebi), we observe that in many centralized matching markets, agents' property rights over objects are derived from a coarse transformation of an underlying score. Prominent examples include the distance-based system employed by Boston Public Schools, where students who lived within a certain radius of each school were prioritized over all others, and the income-based system used in New York public housing allocation, where eligibility is determined by a sharp income cutoff. Motivated by this, we study how to optimally coarsen an underlying score. Our main result is that, for any continuous objective function and under stable matching mechanisms, the optimal design can be attained by splitting agents into at most three indifference classes for each object. We provide insights into this design problem in three applications: distance-based scores in Boston Public Schools, test-based scores for Chicago exam schools, and income-based scores in New York public housing allocation. In the fifth chapter, "Adaptive Priority Mechanisms" (coauthored with Oğuzhan Çelebi), we ask how authorities that care about match quality and diversity should allocate resources when they are uncertain of the market they face? Such a question appears in many contexts, including the allocation of school seats to students from various socioeconomic groups with differing exam scores. We propose a new class of adaptive priority mechanisms (APM) that prioritize agents as a function of both scores that reflect match quality and the number of assigned agents with the same socioeconomic characteristics. When there is a single authority and preferences over scores and diversity are separable, we derive an APM that is optimal, generates a unique outcome, and can be specified solely in terms of the preferences of the authority. By contrast, the ubiquitous priority and quota mechanisms are optimal if and only if the authority is risk-neutral or extremely risk-averse over diversity, respectively. When there are many authorities, it is dominant for each of them to use the optimal APM, and each so doing implements the unique stable matching. However, this is generally inefficient for the authorities. A centralized allocation mechanism that first uses an aggregate APM and then implements authority-specific quotas restores efficiency. Using data from Chicago Public Schools, we estimate that the gains from adopting APM are considerable. In the sixth and final chapter, "Nonlinear Pricing with Under-Utilization: A Theory of Multi-Part Tariffs" (coauthored with Roberto Corrao and Karthik A. Sastry), we study the nonlinear pricing of goods whose usage generates revenue for the seller and of which buyers can freely dispose. The optimal price schedule is a multi-part tariff, featuring tiers within which buyers pay a marginal price of zero. We apply our model to digital goods, for which advertising, data generation, and network effects make usage valuable, but monitoring legitimate usage is infeasible. Our results rationalize common pricing schemes including free products, free trials, and unlimited subscriptions. The possibility of free disposal harms producer and consumer welfare and makes both less sensitive to changes in usage-based revenue and demand.


Essays on Behavioral Macroeconomics

Essays on Behavioral Macroeconomics

Author: Kelin Lu

Publisher:

Published: 2023

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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In this dissertation, three experimental methods are employed to investigate various questions in macroeconomics. In the first chapter, a traditional laboratory experiment examines the influence of non-financial factors, such as intrinsic moral values and extrinsic image considerations, on investors' valuation of stocks in asset markets. The findings reveal that intrinsic morals alone do not exert any impact, supporting the hypothesis that markets erode social responsibility. Specifically, stocks with positive externalities do not command a price premium, and individuals with strong prosocial preferences do not direct their portfolios toward environmentally friendly investments. Conversely, social image considerations significantly affect stock prices in asset markets, as investors assign higher valuations to ethical stocks. The second chapter investigates the response of saving decisions to two alternative forms of capital taxation: wealth tax and capital income tax. Initially, a lifecycle experiment conducted using Amazon Mechanical Turk demonstrates that subjects overreact to wealth taxes but not to capital income taxes when making dynamic saving decisions. Subsequently, a parsimonious behavioral model of individual optimization is developed to characterize this overreaction and elucidate its welfare implications. Finally, additional treatments aim to identify the root cause of this overreaction bias. The results exclude the possibility that intrinsic aversion to paying wealth taxes drives overreaction; instead, it appears to stem from subjects' misconceptions regarding the effects of wealth taxes on their savings. In the third chapter, we undertake an online survey of a nationally representative sample to investigate the diverse channels by which inflation expectations affect present consumption. To accomplish this, a novel survey instrument is developed, featuring two crucial innovations: hypothetical information shocks, which generate exogenous shifts in household inflation expectations, and mechanism-elicitation questions designed to examine the underlying mechanisms. Our findings reveal that heightened future price expectations lead to a decrease in average intended spending for both durable and nondurable goods. Additionally, our survey exposes significant heterogeneity among respondents' underlying channels.


Social and Economic Factors in Decision Making under Uncertainty

Social and Economic Factors in Decision Making under Uncertainty

Author: Kinga Posadzy

Publisher: Linköping University Electronic Press

Published: 2017-11-16

Total Pages: 16

ISBN-13: 9176854213

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The objective of this thesis is to improve the understanding of human behavior that goes beyond monetary rewards. In particular, it investigates social influences in individual’s decision making in situations that involve coordination, competition, and deciding for others. Further, it compares how monetary and social outcomes are perceived. The common theme of all studies is uncertainty. The first four essays study individual decisions that have uncertain consequences, be it due to the actions of others or chance. The last essay, in turn, uses the advances in research on decision making under uncertainty to predict behavior in riskless choices. The first essay, Fairness Versus Efficiency: How Procedural Fairness Concerns Affect Coordination, investigates whether preferences for fair rules undermine the efficiency of coordination mechanisms that put some individuals at a disadvantage. The results from a laboratory experiment show that the existence of coordination mechanisms, such as action recommendations, increases efficiency, even if one party is strongly disadvantaged by the mechanism. Further, it is demonstrated that while individuals’ behavior does not depend on the fairness of the coordination mechanism, their beliefs about people’s behavior do. The second essay, Dishonesty and Competition. Evidence from a stiff competition environment, explores whether and how the possibility to behave dishonestly affects the willingness to compete and who the winner is in a competition between similarly skilled individuals. We do not find differences in competition entry between competitions in which dishonesty is possible and in which it is not. However, we find that due to the heterogeneity in propensity to behave dishonestly, around 20% of winners are not the best-performing individuals. This implies that the efficient allocation of resources cannot be ensured in a stiff competition in which behavior is unmonitored. The third essay, Tracing Risky Decision Making for Oneself and Others: The Role of Intuition and Deliberation, explores how individuals make choices under risk for themselves and on behalf of other people. The findings demonstrate that while there are no differences in preferences for taking risks when deciding for oneself and for others, individuals have greater decision error when choosing for other individuals. The differences in the decision error can be partly attributed to the differences in information processing; individuals employ more deliberative cognitive processing when deciding for themselves than when deciding for others. Conducting more information processing when deciding for others is related to the reduction in decision error. The fourth essay, The Effect of Decision Fatigue on Surgeons’ Clinical Decision Making, investigates how mental depletion, caused by a long session of decision making, affects surgeon’s decision to operate. Exploiting a natural experiment, we find that surgeons are less likely to schedule an operation for patients who have appointment late during the work shift than for patients who have appointment at the beginning of the work shift. Understanding how the quality of medical decisions depends on when the patient is seen is important for achieving both efficiency and fairness in health care, where long shifts are popular. The fifth essay, Preferences for Outcome Editing in Monetary and Social Contexts, compares whether individuals use the same rules for mental representation of monetary outcomes (e.g., purchases, expenses) as for social outcomes (e.g., having nice time with friends). Outcome editing is an operation in mental accounting that determines whether individuals prefer to first combine multiple outcomes before their evaluation (integration) or evaluate each outcome separately (segregation). I find that the majority of individuals express different preferences for outcome editing in the monetary context than in the social context. Further, while the results on the editing of monetary outcomes are consistent with theoretical predictions, no existing model can explain the editing of social outcomes.


Essays on Behavioral Economics and Macroeconomics

Essays on Behavioral Economics and Macroeconomics

Author: Chen Lian (Ph. D.)

Publisher:

Published: 2020

Total Pages: 302

ISBN-13:

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This thesis consists of three chapters in behavioral economics and macroeconomics. In the first chapter, I develop an approach, which I term narrow thinking, to break the decision maker's ability to perfectly coordinate her multiple decisions. For a narrow thinker, different decisions are based on different, non-nested, information. I recast this individual decision problem as multiple selves playing an incomplete-information game. The narrow thinker then makes each decision with imperfect knowledge of the other decisions. The friction effectively attenuates the interaction across decisions. Narrow thinking then provides a model of narrow bracketing without directly imposing that each decision is made in isolation. The main application is that narrow thinking generates smooth mental accounting, without requiring the decision maker to have explicit budgets. My approach also leads to unique predictions about what drives the degree of mental accounting behavior. Depending on the environment, narrow thinking can translate into either over- or under-reaction relative to the frictionless benchmark. In the second chapter, I am motivated by the fact that consumers have difficulty tracking their total wealth, or keeping it at the front of their minds when making consumption and saving decisions. In this chapter, I show how such imperfect perception of wealth can explain several key deviations of consumption behavior from the permanent income hypothesis, including: excess sensitivity to current income, smaller MPCs out of wealth than out of current income, and excess discounting of future income. Importantly, my approach does not rely on liquidity constraints and can explain the empirical evidence on high-liquidity consumers' deviations from the permanent income hypothesis. I further provide an interpretation of the model in which the consumer has separate mental accounts for her current income and her wealth. Thus, the consumer exhibits behavior similar to a two-asset model, in a one-asset context without borrowing constraints. The friction can be quantitatively important in explaining MPCs, and has substantive macro implications for monetary and redistributive policy. Methodologically, the paper develops a tractable method for incorporating imperfect perception of the endogenous state into an otherwise standard Markov decision problem. In the third chapter (joint with George-Marios Angeletos), we turn to the classic macroeconomics question about how the economy responds to news about future policies or future fundamentals. Standard practice assumes that agents have common knowledge of such news and face no uncertainty about how others will respond. Relaxing this assumption attenuates the general-equilibrium effects of news and rationalizes a form of myopia at the aggregate level. We establish these insights within a class of games which nests, but is not limited to, the New Keynesian model. Our results help resolve the forward-guidance puzzle, offer a rationale for the front-loading of fiscal stimuli, and illustrate more broadly the fragility of predictions that rest on long series of forward-looking feedback loops. JEL Codes D90, E50, E90.


Essays on Mechanism and Market Design

Essays on Mechanism and Market Design

Author: Aaron Luke Bodoh-Creed

Publisher:

Published: 2010

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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The focus of this dissertation is the role of information in the determination of market outcomes. The first essay provides a novel framework for studying large market mechanisms with an application to the information aggregation properties of uniform price auctions. The second essay analyzes a model of mood and associative memory and shows that this bias could explain anomalous results in the behavioral finance and organizational behavior literatures. The third and final essay analyzes ambiguity aversion and how it affects outcomes in general mechanisms. The first essay, "Mean Field Approximation of Large Games, " provides a general framework for approximating the equilibria of games with many participants using analytically tractable nonatomic limit games. We prove that if the game is continuous, then the set of equilibria is upper hemicontinuous in the number of agents. This implies that we can use equilibrium strategies of the limit game as an approximation of the equilibrium actions of the agents in the large finite game. We argue that this continuity property implies that generic large, continuous markets are almost competitive in the limit. We use our framework to analyze multi-unit demand uniform price auctions with both a common value component and bidders who value successive units as complements. We show that these auctions fully reveal the state of the world asymptotically and result in ex post efficient allocations with arbitrarily high probability in the asymptotic limit. As a second application, we provide a framework for approximating large stochastic games using dynamic competitive equilibria with applications to macroeconomics, industrial organization, engineering and computer science. The second essay, "Mood and Associative Memory, " examines the biases in memory caused by an agent's affective state. Within the psychology literature, it is a well established fact that decision makers in a positive emotional state are optimistic about the odds of positive random events and agents in a negative emotional state are pessimistic. By building a mathematical model firmly grounded on psychological primitives, we develop a behavioral decision theory framework that can be utilized in a wide range of microeconomic models. We apply our model to study employee morale and clarify a severely conflicted literature on morale within the Organizational Behavior literature. We also show that biases in memory are a potential explanation for a wide range of asset pricing anomalies such as excess volatility, short run underreaction and long run overreaction to news, and the influence of non-fundamental events. Our model provides a tool for policy makers to analyze the effects of biases in memory on the response of agents to firms, markets, and government policies and can be used to identify situations in which either public or private intervention may be required to ameliorate the effects of the agents' errors in judgment. The third and final essay, "Ambiguous Beliefs and Mechanism Design, " explores the effects of ambiguity aversion, also known as Knightian Uncertainty, on mechanism design theory. Knightian uncertainty refers to risk within the economy that is not characterized by a stochastic process commonly known to the agents. Compelling psychological data, such as the classical Ellsberg Paradox, have shown that agents reveal a strong aversion to Knightian Uncertainty above and beyond the risk aversion considered in neoclassical microeconomic theory. Policy makers ought to be especially concerned about the effects of ambiguity aversion, neglected in traditional studies of mechanism and market design, in situations where the agents are unfamiliar with the mechanism and the economic environment the mechanism creates. We unify the Multiple Prior Expected Utility (MEU) model of ambiguity aversion with the tools of contract theory to provide a general framework to analyze the effects of ambiguity aversion in market settings and use these tools to assess the effect of ambiguity aversion on auctions and bargaining problems. We show that the first and second price auction cannot be ranked when the agents are ambiguity averse, derive the optimal auction format, and study the effects of ambiguity on auction entry. We also prove that ambiguity aversion can be efficiency enhancing in ex ante budget balanced mechanisms and revenue enhancing in ex post efficient bargaining mechanisms.


Essays in Theoretical and Behavioral Economics

Essays in Theoretical and Behavioral Economics

Author: Shengwu Li

Publisher:

Published: 2016

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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This dissertation consists of three essays in theoretical and behavioral economics. They all concern decision-making in complex environments. The first chapter is entitled Obviously Strategy-Proof Mechanisms. It is generally held that some strategy-proof mechanisms are easy for non-experts to understand, and others are difficult to understand. However, this distinction is not captured by standard game theory. In this chapter, I define obviously dominant strategies. Whether a strategy is obviously dominant depends (just) on the extensive game form. I characterize this definition in two ways: Obviously dominant strategies are exactly those strategies that a cognitively limited agent can recognize as dominant. Obviously strategy-proof (OSP) mechanisms are those that can be run by a social planner with only partial commitment power. For an environment with one-dimensional types and transfers, I characterize the OSP mechanisms and the OSP-implementable allocation rules. I test and corroborate the theory with a laboratory experiment. The second chapter is entitled Context Effects as Explained by Foraging Theory, and is coauthored with Neil Yu. This chapter reconciles two seemingly competing explanations of context-dependent choice, one invoking psychological mechanisms, and the other Bayesian learning. We prove that standard context effects are features of the optimal solution to a general dynamic stochastic resource- acquisition problem. The model has two key ingredients: inter-temporal substitution and learning about the environment. Interpreted as a description of animal foraging behavior, it explains why context effects might be adaptive in nature. Interpreted as a description of consumer choice problems, it suggests that context effects might result from rational inference. A simple experiment shows that the latter interpretation sometimes holds. The third chapter is entitled Thickness and Information in Dynamic Matching Markets, and is coauthored with Mohammad Akbarpour and Shayan Oveis Gharan. We introduce a simple model of dynamic matching in networked markets, where agents arrive and depart stochastically, and the composition of the trade network depends endogenously on the matching algorithm. We show that if the planner can identify agents who are about to depart, then waiting to thicken the market is highly valuable, and if the planner cannot identify such agents, then matching agents greedily is close to optimal. We characterize the optimal waiting time (in a restricted class of mechanisms) as a function of waiting costs and network sparsity. The planner's decision problem in our model involves a combinatorially complex state space. However, we show that simple local algorithms that choose the right time to match agents, but do not exploit the global network structure, can perform close to complex optimal algorithms. Finally, we consider a setting where agents have private information about their departure times, and design a continuous-time dynamic mechanism to elicit this information.


Essays in Behavioral Economics

Essays in Behavioral Economics

Author: Alexander Gotthard Real

Publisher:

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 87

ISBN-13:

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In the second chapter I propose a theoretical framework, based on psychological game theory, that is able to account for recent findings pointing to the fact that individuals are more likely to behave selfishly if their responsibility of taking selfish actions is obscured. In this framework, decision makers do have a notion of what constitutes acceptable behavior in a given situation (injunctive norm) according to some values (e.g fairness, reciprocity), but they are not internally motivated to follow those norms as would be the case if they had traditional "social preferences". Instead, individuals are averse to be seen transgressing a norm. The final chapter studies how individuals process news regarding the likelihood of an event that is desirable, but not ego-relevant. I hypothesize that individuals biasedly favor good news over bad news and present an experimental design and data to test this hypothesis. As opposed to previous research that has found biases in information processing regarding ego-relevant and desirable events, I find no evidence of a systematic bias.