Essays on economic behaviour and regulation/ Subrato Banerjee
Material type:
- 23 330.019 B215
- Guided by Prof. Bharat Ramaswami
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
THESIS | ISI Library, Kolkata | 330.019 B215 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | E-Thesis | TH463 |
Browsing ISI Library, Kolkata shelves Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
No cover image available | No cover image available | No cover image available | No cover image available | |||||
330.018 B645 Methodology of economics | 330.0182 Ao638 Optimal control and system theory in dynamic economic analysis | 330.0184 B422 Economics and operational research | 330.019 B215 Essays on economic behaviour and regulation/ | 330.019 B863 Psychology of economic decisions | 330.019 C329 Behavioral economics / | 330.019 D537 Behavioral economics and its applications |
Thesis (Ph.D.) - Indian Statistical Institute, 2016
Introduction -- Set Contraction and Bargaining Outcomes: A Laboratory Experiment -- Dictator Games in the Field: The Private Moral Calculus of Economic Agents -- Testing for fairness in regulation: Application to the Delhi transportation market
Guided by Prof. Bharat Ramaswami
This thesis offers a comparison of the ideas of theorized bargaining with actual bargaining behavior in a laboratory (chapter 2), a field (chapter 3), and a market (chapter 4). Each chapter is motivated with real life examples. The second chapter, for instance, in a controlled laboratory environment, seeks to answer a broad range of questions like if consumers of a product could stand to gain out of a mere announcement of a maximum retail price (MRP), or if labor unions can gain from the mere existence of a minimum wage law, even when none is binding. Similarly, the third chapter is on a field experiment that focuses on considerations that may prevent dictators (agents with complete bargaining power) from settling on their most preferred allocation. The final chapter analyzes the role of an arbitrator in the settlement
of bargaining outcomes and analyzes the requirements of the same to conclude that they are consistent with the fairness considerations in the spirit of Rabin (1993). The rest of this chapter provides a broad overview of each that follows.
There are no comments on this title.