May 6–7, 2011

Organizers

This conference brought together market designers together with price theorists to discuss linkages between their fields.The conference highlighted new work and provided opportunities for group engagement and discussion.

Friday's sessions showcased recently-discovered relationships between matching theory and price theory, including connections between (matching-theoretic) stability and competitive pricing. Price-theoretic market design innovations, both econometric and theoretical, were presented.

On Saturday, conference participants explored theoretical and empirical evidence on the importance of marketplace design.This discussion concluded with a panel featuring Gary Becker, James Heckman, Paul Milgrom, and Alvin Roth fielding questions from the audience.

Program

Friday, May 6

“The College Admissions Problem with a Continuum of Students”

“Stability and Competitive Equilibrium in Trading Networks”

“Sorting and Factor Intensity: Production and Unemployment across Skills”

“Hedonic Price Equilibria, Stable Matching, and Optimal Transport: Equivalence, Topology, and Uniqueness”

“Unobserved Heterogeneity in Matching Games”

“Strategyproofness for ‘Price Takers’ as a Desideratum for Market Design”

Saturday, May 7

“Decentralized Matching with Aligned Preferences”

“Market vs. Design:  Congestion and Evaluation Costs”

Panel and Audience Discussion on Open Questions

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