The welfare cost of signaling (Q725093): Difference between revisions
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Property / author: Fan Yang / rank | |||
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Property / full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.3390/g8010011 / rank | |||
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Property / cites work: Strategic Information Transmission / rank | |||
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Property / cites work: Alternating bid bargaining with a smallest money unit / rank | |||
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Property / cites work: Reexamination of the perfectness concept for equilibrium points in extensive games / rank | |||
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Latest revision as of 05:18, 16 July 2024
scientific article
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English | The welfare cost of signaling |
scientific article |
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The welfare cost of signaling (English)
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1 August 2018
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Summary: Might the resource costliness of making signals credible be low or negligible? Using a job market as an example, we build a signaling model to determine the extent to which a transfer from an applicant might replace a resource cost as an equilibrium method of achieving signal credibility. Should a firm's announcement of hiring for an open position be believed, the firm has an incentive to use a properly-calibrated fee to implement a separating equilibrium. The result is robust to institutional changes, outside options, many firms or many applicants and applicant risk aversion, though a sufficiently risk-averse applicant who is sufficiently likely to be a high type may lead to a preference for a pooling equilibrium.
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costly signaling
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social cost of signaling
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asymmetric information
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separating equilibrium
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