2013
DOI: 10.1093/restud/rds045
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Efficient Allocations in Dynamic Private Information Economies with Persistent Shocks: A First-Order Approach

Abstract: I study efficient allocations in a dynamic private information economy with a continuum of individual shocks that are persistent. I formulate the problem recursively and develop a first order approach to simplify it. The main advantage of the first order approach is that it allows for a substantial reduction of the state space of the dynamic program. This makes the problem tractable and permits quantitative implementation of the problem.I provide both qualitative and quantitative solutions for a taste shock ec… Show more

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Cited by 84 publications
(91 citation statements)
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References 33 publications
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“…Sannikov (2008) considers dynamic payments but has no state variables other than promised utility. the approach of Werning (2001), Abraham and Pavoni (2008), Farhi and Werning (2013), Kapicka (2013), and Pavan, Segal, and Toikka (2014) in discrete time dynamic moral hazard problems. 5 Unlike the hidden action case and Williams (2011), with hidden savings I cannot provide useful conditions which guarantee the validity of the first-order approach ex-ante.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Sannikov (2008) considers dynamic payments but has no state variables other than promised utility. the approach of Werning (2001), Abraham and Pavoni (2008), Farhi and Werning (2013), Kapicka (2013), and Pavan, Segal, and Toikka (2014) in discrete time dynamic moral hazard problems. 5 Unlike the hidden action case and Williams (2011), with hidden savings I cannot provide useful conditions which guarantee the validity of the first-order approach ex-ante.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The envelope condition for human capital can then be inserted into the optimality condition for human capital (22) to obtain (24) implies…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…21 According to census data, the mean annual earnings of high-school dropouts have been equal to $20; 241 in 2010. 22 By comparison, the annual expenditure per year for upper-secondary students was $12; 690. Computing the cost-income ratio, we …nd that the cost of an additional year of upper-secondary education amounts to 62:6% of annual income or, given our 30-year period, to 2:08% of lifetime income of the median worker without non-compulsory education.…”
Section: Calibrationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To the best of our knowledge, the recursive contracting literature has not yet found approaches to deal with such problems. Kapicka (2013) and Farhi and Werning (2013) compute models with time-separable preferences and persistent shocks that are continuous. Relying on the first-order approach and balanced-growth preferences, they are able to reduce the number of state variables to two.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%