Perfect Bayesian Equilibrium: Economics 302 - Microeconomic Theory II: Strategic Behavior
Perfect Bayesian Equilibrium: Economics 302 - Microeconomic Theory II: Strategic Behavior
Instructor: Songzi Du
Simon Fraser University
Lecture 12
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Lecture 12
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Beer-Quiche game
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Education as Signal
Players: high type student, low type student, and a firm.
The student, high or low type, chooses whether or not to go to
University. The firm observes this choice of education, and decides to
hire the student or not.
The firm cannot tell if the student is high or low type, believes that
the student is high type with probability 0.5.
Lecture 12
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Education as Signal
Players: high type student, low type student, and a firm.
The student, high or low type, chooses whether or not to go to
University. The firm observes this choice of education, and decides to
hire the student or not.
The firm cannot tell if the student is high or low type, believes that
the student is high type with probability 0.5.
The firm gets 1 he hires the high type student, -1 if he hires the low
type student, 0 if not hiring.
Lecture 12
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Education as Signal
Players: high type student, low type student, and a firm.
The student, high or low type, chooses whether or not to go to
University. The firm observes this choice of education, and decides to
hire the student or not.
The firm cannot tell if the student is high or low type, believes that
the student is high type with probability 0.5.
The firm gets 1 he hires the high type student, -1 if he hires the low
type student, 0 if not hiring.
The high type student prefers university; the low type student prefers
leisure (no university). The student, high or low type, gets 1 if hired,
0 otherwise; and an additional 10 if he follows his preferred
educational choice.
ECON 302 (SFU)
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Education as Signal
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Lecture 12
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Two cards: Ace and King, randomly dealt to player 1 (with 50-50
probability). The card is player 1s private information (type). Player
2 does not receive a card.
Player 1 chooses first to bid or fold; if he folds, player 1 loses his ante
of $1 to player 2.
If player 1 bids, then player 2 chooses to bid or fold; if he folds, player
2 loses his ante of $1 to player 1.
If both bid, the ante is raised to $b, player 1 wins $b if he has Ace
and loses $b if he has King. (b is an exogenous parameter.)
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