Here is a list of papers that we might be discussing through the year. It is expected that all of us will have read each paper in advance of the meeting in which that paper is to be discussed.
You are welcome to add papers in your area of interest, but clear them with the instructor first.
Second-year students taking the class for credit must submit a referee report on the paper a day in advance.
Journals you can use to find papers in:
Some Papers (in no particular order):
Yeon-Koo Che and Konrad Mierendorff, Optimal Dynamic Allocation of Attention
Qingmin Liu, Konrad Mierendorff, Xianwen Shi, and Weijie Zhong, Auctions with Limited Commitment
Qingmin Liu, "Stability and Bayesian Consistency in Two-Sided Markets."
Matthew Elliott and Ben Golub, A Network Approach to Public Goods
Matthew Elliott, Ben Golub and Matthew Jackson, Financial Networks and Contagion
Toomas Hinnosaar, Optimal Sequential Contests
Debraj Ray and Rajiv Vohra, "Games of Love and Hate"
Antony Millner, Nondogmatic Social Discounting
Annie Liang and Xiaosheng Mu, Complementary Information and Learning Traps
Annie Liang, Xiaosheng Mu and Vasilis Syrgkanis, Dynamically Aggregating Diverse Information
Mohammad Akbarpour, Piotr Dworczak and Scott Duke Kominers, Redistribution through Markets
Mohammad Akbarpour and Shengwu Li, Credible Mechanisms: A Trilemma
Elliot Lipnowski and Evan Sadler, Peer-Confirming Equilibrium
Elliot Lipnowski and Doron Ravid, Cheap Talk with Transparent Motives
Doron Ravid, Anne-Katrin Roesler and Balazs Szentes, Learning Before Trading: On the Inefficiency of Ignoring Free Information
Nageeb Ali, Maximilian Mihm and Lucas Siga, Adverse Selection in Distributive Politics
Andrew McClellan, Experimentation and Approval Mechanisms
Daniel Clark, Drew Fudenberg and Alex Wolitsky: Steady-State Equilibria in Anonymous Repeated Games, I: Trigger Strategies in General Stage Games and Steady-State Equilibria in Anonymous Repeated Games, II: Coordination-Proof Strategies in the Prisoner's Dilemma
Alex Wolitsky, Learning from Others' Outcomes
Dirk Bergemann, Benjamin Brooks, and Stephen Morris, "The Limits of Price DiscriminationDirk Bergemann, Benjamin Brooks, and Stephen Morris, "Search, Information and Prices."
Erik Eyster, Shengwu Li, and Sarah Ridout, "A Theory of Ex-Post Rationalization."
T. Nguyen and R. Vohra, "Near-Feasible Stable Matchings with Couples."
Motty Perry and Phil Reny, "How to Count Citations if You Must."
A. Lizzeri and L. Yariv, "Collective Self-Control."
O Compte and P. Jehiel, "The Coalitional Nash Bargaining Solution."
D. Bergeman and J. Valimaki, "Bandit Problems." May be better for reading than for presenting as it's a survey.
Jon Eguia and Dimitrios Xefteris, "Implementation by Vote-Buying Mechanisms."
Rahul Deb, Mallesh Pai and Maher Said, "Evaluating Strategic Forecasters."
Aislinn Bohren, Alex Imas and Michael Rosemberg, "The Dynamics of Discrimination: Theory and Evidence."
Nima Haghpanah, Elliot Lipnowski and Aditya Kuvalekar, "Selling to a Group."
Avidit Acharya, Elliot Lipnowski and João Ramos, "Optimal Political Career Dynamics."
Paula Onuchic and Debraj Ray, "Signaling and Discrimination in Collaborative Projects."
Paula Onuchic and Joao Ramos, "Disclosure and Incentives in Teams."