Mechanism Design with News Utility
Jetlir Duraj

TL;DR
This paper integrates news utility into static Bayesian mechanism design, analyzing how timing affects agents' utility and mechanism outcomes, with applications to auctions and public goods.
Contribution
It introduces the role of mechanism timeline in news utility models and characterizes optimal timing structures in different settings.
Findings
Optimal timelines depend on the mechanism setting.
No-delay timelines are optimal in screening models.
Delays between stages are optimal in auction settings.
Abstract
News utility is the idea that the utility of an agent depends on changes in her beliefs over consumption and money. We introduce news utility into otherwise classical static Bayesian mechanism design models. We show that a key role is played by the timeline of the mechanism, i.e. whether there are delays between the announcement stage, the participation stage, the play stage and the realization stage of a mechanism. Depending on the timing, agents with news utility can experience two additional news utility effects: a surprise effect derived from comparing to pre-mechanism beliefs, as well as a realization effect derived from comparing post-play beliefs with the actual outcome of the mechanism. We look at two distinct mechanism design settings reflecting the two main strands of the classical literature. In the first model, a monopolist screens an agent according to the magnitude of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAuction Theory and Applications · Consumer Market Behavior and Pricing · Experimental Behavioral Economics Studies
