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Lemons & Loons

Tim Perri

Review of Behavioral Economics, 2016, vol. 3, issue 2, 173-188

Abstract: In Akerlof (2012, 2013), Akerlof and Tong (2013), and Akerlof and Shiller (2015), it is argued that individuals often do not behave according to rational expectations. They show how buyers in a complete lemons market are worse off if they behave irrationally – like loons. I examine different situations with asymmetric information (including when workers may signal or be screened to reveal their ability) to determine the effects on welfare for loons and for society. Sometimes there are opposite effects for welfare, for society and loons. It is also possible for society to gain when loons, on average, gain from loony behavior.

Date: 2016
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