Market design is a practical methodology for creation of markets of certain properties, which is partially based on
mechanism design
Mechanism design is a field in economics and game theory that takes an objectives-first approach to designing economic mechanisms or incentives, toward desired objectives, in strategic settings, where players act rationally. Because it starts a ...
. In some markets, prices may be used to induce the desired outcomes — these markets are the study of
auction theory
Auction theory is an applied branch of economics which deals with how bidders act in auction markets and researches how the features of auction markets incentivise predictable outcomes. Auction theory is a tool used to inform the design of real- ...
. In other markets, prices may not be used — these markets are the study of
matching theory.
In his 2008,
Nemmers Prize lecture, Market Design and
Stanford University economist
Paul Milgrom
Paul Robert Milgrom (born April 20, 1948) is an American economist. He is the Shirley and Leonard Ely Professor of Humanities and Sciences at the Stanford University School of Humanities and Sciences, a position he has held since 1987. He is a ...
commented on the interdisciplinary nature of market design: "Market design is a kind of economic engineering, utilizing laboratory research, game theory, algorithms, simulations, and more. Its challenges inspire us to rethink longstanding fundamentals of economic theory."
[Milgrom Nemmers Prize Presentation Slides, 2008](_blank)
Milgrom is, along with fellow Stanford economist
Al Roth, one of the founders of modern Market Design.
Auction theory
Early research on auctions focused on two special cases: common value auctions in which buyers have private signals of an items true value and private value auctions in which values are identically and independently distributed. Milgrom and Weber (1982) present a much more general theory of auctions with positively related values. Each of ''n'' buyers receives a private signal
. Buyer ''i''’s value
is strictly increasing in
and is an increasing symmetric function of
. If signals are independently and identically distributed, then buyer ''i''’s expected value
is independent of the other buyers’ signals. Thus, the buyers’ expected values are independently and identically distributed. This is the standard private value auction. For such auctions the revenue equivalence theorem holds. That is, expected revenue is the same in the sealed first-price and second-price auctions.
Milgrom and Weber assumed instead that the private signals are “affiliated”. With two buyers, the random variables
and
with probability density function
are affiliated if
:
, for all
and all