Design of an application process for research grants

<p>We use a version of a Bayesian Stackelberg game to model a one-stage application process for research grants. A research council wants to allocate research grants to researchers in an environment of imperfect information. The information asymmetry stems from the fact that selection should i...

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Bibliografiska uppgifter
Huvudupphovsman: Horn, M
Övriga upphovsmän: Jewitt, I
Materialtyp: Lärdomsprov
Språk:English
Publicerad: 2011
Ämnen:
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author Horn, M
author2 Jewitt, I
author_facet Jewitt, I
Horn, M
author_sort Horn, M
collection OXFORD
description <p>We use a version of a Bayesian Stackelberg game to model a one-stage application process for research grants. A research council wants to allocate research grants to researchers in an environment of imperfect information. The information asymmetry stems from the fact that selection should ideally be based on the quality of the researcher's project. However, neither the researcher nor the research council know the quality but each agent receives a separate signal that is informative about it. We show that the application process always yields a better expected quality of research projects and that, despite the costs it imposes on each agent, the equilibrium of the game can be a welfare improvement over a random allocation of the research grants.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:ebb948fa-c4f3-4126-a698-e2bfcd1b59982022-05-04T14:35:21ZDesign of an application process for research grantsThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:ebb948fa-c4f3-4126-a698-e2bfcd1b5998MicroeconomicsEconomicsEnglishValet2011Horn, MJewitt, I<p>We use a version of a Bayesian Stackelberg game to model a one-stage application process for research grants. A research council wants to allocate research grants to researchers in an environment of imperfect information. The information asymmetry stems from the fact that selection should ideally be based on the quality of the researcher's project. However, neither the researcher nor the research council know the quality but each agent receives a separate signal that is informative about it. We show that the application process always yields a better expected quality of research projects and that, despite the costs it imposes on each agent, the equilibrium of the game can be a welfare improvement over a random allocation of the research grants.</p>
spellingShingle Microeconomics
Economics
Horn, M
Design of an application process for research grants
title Design of an application process for research grants
title_full Design of an application process for research grants
title_fullStr Design of an application process for research grants
title_full_unstemmed Design of an application process for research grants
title_short Design of an application process for research grants
title_sort design of an application process for research grants
topic Microeconomics
Economics
work_keys_str_mv AT hornm designofanapplicationprocessforresearchgrants