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Many types of economic and social activities involve significant behavioral complementarities (peer effects) with neighbors in the social network. The same activities often exert externalities that cumulate in "stocks" affecting agents' welfare and incentives. For instance, smoking is subject to...
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According to Wardrop's first principle, agents in a congested network choose their routes selfishly, a behavior that is captured by the Nash equilibrium of the underlying noncooperative game. A Nash equilibrium does not optimize any global criterion per se, and so there is no apparent reason why...
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We study how altruism networks affect the adoption of formal insurance. Agents have private CARA utilities and are … insurance is lower with altruism than without at low prices, but higher at high prices. Remarkably, individual incentives are …
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