Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5071830 Games and Economic Behavior 2014 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•A dynamic market for lemons is analyzed.•The quality of the good is endogenously determined by the seller.•The possibility of trade creates a moral hazard problem.•We show the possibility of trade does not contribute to the efficiency.

We analyze a dynamic market for lemons in which the quality of the good is endogenously determined by the seller. Potential buyers sequentially submit offers to one seller. The seller can make an investment that determines the quality of the item at the beginning of the game, which is unobservable to buyers. At the interim stage of the game, the information and payoff structures are the same as in the market for lemons. Our main result is that the possibility of trade does not create any efficiency gain if (i) the common discounting is low, and (ii) the static incentive constraints preclude the mutually agreeable ex-ante contract under which the trade happens with probability one. Our result does not depend on whether the offers by buyers are private or public.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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