Decision rules and information provision: monitoring versus manipulation


Autoria(s): Palumbo, Giuliana; Iossa, Elisabetta
Data(s)

13/05/2008

23/09/2010

13/05/2008

23/09/2010

01/08/2002

Resumo

The paper focuses on the organization of institutions designed to resolve disputes between two parties, when some information is not veriable and decision makers may have vested preferences. It shows that the choice of how much discretional power to grant to the decision maker and who provides the information are intrinsically related. Direct involvement of the interested parties in the supply of information enhances monitoring over the decision maker, although at the cost of higher manipulation. Thus, it is desirable when the decision maker is granted high discretion. On the contrary, when the decision maker has limited discretional power, information provision is better assigned to an agent with no direct stake. The analysis helps to rationalize some organizational arrangements that are commonly observed in the context of judicial and antitrust decision-making.

Identificador

0104-8910

http://hdl.handle.net/10438/502

Idioma(s)

en_US

Publicador

Escola de Pós-Graduação em Economia da FGV

Relação

Ensaios Econômicos;452

Palavras-Chave #Rules #Discretion #Information provision #Manipulation #Monitoring #Economia #Processo decisório - Modelos econométricos #Econometria
Tipo

Working Paper