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{{Short description|Economist}}
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'''Benny Moldovanu''' (born April 11, 1962) is a German-Israeli economist who currently holds the Chair of Economic Theory II at the [[University of Bonn]].<ref>[https://www.econ2.uni-bonn.de/moldovanu Profile of Benny Moldovanu on the website of the University of Bonn. Retrieved May 2nd, 2018.]</ref> His research focuses on applied [[game theory]], [[auction theory]], [[mechanism design]], contests and [[matching theory (economics)|matching theory]], and [[voting theory]].<ref>[http://www.hcm.uni-bonn.de/people/profile/benny-moldovanu/ Profile of Benny Moldovanu on the website of the Hausdorff Center for Mathematics. Retrieved May 2nd, 2018.]</ref> In 2004, Moldovanu was awarded the [[Gossen Prize]] for his contributions to [[auction theory]] and [[mechanism design]].<ref>[https://www.socialpolitik.de/En/gossen-award-winner List of Gossen Prize winners. Retrieved May 2nd, 2018.]</ref>
'''Benny Moldovanu''' (born April 11, 1962) is a German economist who currently holds the Chair of Economic Theory II at the [[University of Bonn]].<ref name="Bonn">{{cite web|url=https://www.econ2.uni-bonn.de/moldovanu|title=Prof. Dr. Benny Moldovanu|publisher=[[University of Bonn]]|website=www.econ2.uni-bonn.de|access-date=April 30, 2023}}</ref> His research focuses on applied [[game theory]], [[auction theory]], [[mechanism design]], contests and [[matching theory (economics)|matching theory]], and [[voting theory]].<ref name="Hausdorff">{{cite web|url=http://www.hcm.uni-bonn.de/people/profile/benny-moldovanu/|title=
Prof. Dr. Benny Moldovanu|publisher=[[Hausdorff Center for Mathematics]]| website=www.hcm.uni-bonn.de|access-date=April 30, 2023}}</ref> In 2004, Moldovanu was awarded the [[Gossen Prize]] for his contributions to [[auction theory]] and [[mechanism design]].<ref>[https://www.socialpolitik.de/En/gossen-award-winner List of Gossen Prize winners. Retrieved May 2nd, 2018.]</ref>


== Biography==
== Biography==
Benny Moldovanu earned a [[Bachelor of Science|BSc]] and [[Master of Science|MSc]] in [[mathematics]] from the [[Hebrew University of Jerusalem]] in 1986 and 1989, respectively, the latter under the supervision of Bezalel Peleg. He then obtained in 1991 a PhD in economics from the [[University of Bonn]], with future [[Nobel Memorial Prize]] winner [[Reinhard Selten]] as advisor and Avner Shaked as co-advisor, with thesis "Game theory, economics, social and behavioral sciences".<ref>{{MathGenealogy|id=87666}}</ref> He went on to earn his [[habilitation]] from the same university in 1995. Having worked as assistant professor of economics at the University of Bonn after his PhD (1991–1995), he then became full professor at the [[University of Mannheim]] (1995–2002) before returning to the University of Bonn in 2002, where he has worked ever since. At Bonn, he has been the Co-Director and later Academic Director of the [[Bonn Graduate School of Economics]] (2006–2013) as well as Co-Director of the [[Hausdorff Center for Mathematics]] (2006–2013), where he today leads the research area on [[mechanism design]] and [[game theory]].<ref name="Hausdorff"/> Moreover, at Bonn, Moldovanu is currently Director of the Institute of Microeconomics (since 2012) as well as of the Reinhard Selten Institute for Research in Economics (since 2017).<ref>[http://selten.institute/2017/04/03/bonn-cologne-research-institute-in-economics-bcecon-founded/ Reinhard Selten Institute (April 3rd, 2017). Reinhard Selten Institute (RSI) founded]. Retrieved May 3rd, 2018.</ref> Throughout his professional career, Moldovanu has held visiting appointments at the [[University of Michigan, Ann Arbor]], [[Northwestern University]], [[University College London]], [[Yale University]], [[Tel Aviv University]], and the [[Hebrew University of Jerusalem]]. In terms of professional activities, he has been a member of the Councils of the [[European Economic Association]] and [[Game Theory Society]], is a research fellow at the [[Centre for Economic Policy Research]] (CEPR), and has chaired the Scientific Committees of the [[Econometric Society]] and [[German Economic Association]]. Finally, he has performed editorial duties for ''[[Econometrica]]'', ''[[Journal of the European Economic Association]]'', ''[[Games and Economic Behavior]]'', ''[[Journal of Economic Theory]]'', and ''[[Economic Policy (journal)|Economic Policy]]''.<ref name="Bonn"/>

Benny Moldovanu earned a [[Bachelor of Science|BSc]] and [[Master of Science|MSc]] in [[mathematics]] from the [[Hebrew University of Jerusalem]] in 1986 and 1989, respectively, the latter under the supervision of Bezalel Peleg. He then obtained a PhD in economics from the [[University of Bonn]], with future [[Nobel Memorial Prize]] winner [[Reinhard Selten]] as advisor, in 1991 and [[habilitation|habilitated]] there in 1995. Having worked as assistant professor of economics at the University of Bonn after his PhD (1991–95), he then became full professor at the [[University of Mannheim]] (1995–2002) before returning to the University of Bonn in 2002, where he has worked ever since. At Bonn, he has been the Co-Director and later Academic Director of the [[Bonn Graduate School of Economics]] (2006–13) as well as Co-Director of the [[Hausdorff Center for Mathematics]] (2006–13), where he today leads the research area on [[mechanism design]] and [[game theory]].<ref>[http://www.hcm.uni-bonn.de/people/profile/benny-moldovanu/ Profile of Benny Moldovanu on the website of the Hausdorff Center for Mathematics. Retrieved May 3rd, 2018.]</ref> Moreover, at Bonn, Moldovanu is currently Director of the Institute of Microeconomics (since 2012) as well as of the Reinhard Selten Institute for Research in Economics (since 2017).<ref>[http://selten.institute/2017/04/03/bonn-cologne-research-institute-in-economics-bcecon-founded/ Reinhard Selten Institute (April 3rd, 2017). Reinhard Selten Institute (RSI) founded. Retrieved May 3rd, 2018.]</ref> Throughout his professional career, Moldovanu has held visiting appointments at the [[University of Michigan, Ann Arbor]], [[Northwestern University]], [[University College London]], [[Yale University]], [[Tel Aviv University]], and the [[Hebrew University of Jerusalem]]. In terms of professional activities, he has been a member of the Councils of the [[European Economic Association]] and [[Game Theory Society]], is a research fellow at the [[Centre for Economic Policy Research]] (CEPR), and has chaired the Scientific Committees of the [[Econometric Society]] and [[German Economic Association]]. Finally, he has performed editorial duties for ''[[Econometrica]]'', ''[[Journal of the European Economic Association]]'', ''[[Games and Economic Behavior]]'', ''[[Journal of Economic Theory]]'', and ''[[Economic Policy (journal)|Economic Policy]]''.<ref>[https://www.econ2.uni-bonn.de/moldovanu Profile of Benny Moldovanu on the website of the University of Bonn. Retrieved May 2nd, 2018.]</ref>


== Research==
== Research==
Benny Moldovanu's research focuses on applied [[game theory]], [[auction theory]], [[mechanism design]], contests and [[matching theory (economics)|matching theory]], and [[voting theory]].<ref name="Hausdorff"/> In his research, he has particularly often collaborated with [[Philippe Jehiel]] ([[Paris School of Economics]]).<ref>{{GoogleScholar|id=iR7AU5QAAAAJ}}</ref> According to [[IDEAS/RePEc]], he belongs to the top 3% of economists in terms of research output.<ref>[https://ideas.repec.org/top/top.person.all.html#pmo12 Ranking of economists registered on IDEAS/RePEc. Retrieved May 3rd, 2018.]</ref> In particular, his research has been recognized with the [[Max Planck Research Prize]] (2001) and [[Gossen Prize]] (2004) as well as fellowships of the [[Econometric Society]] (2004), [[European Economic Association]] (2009), and [[Game Theory Society]] (2017).<ref name="Bonn"/>

Benny Moldovanu's research focuses on applied [[game theory]], [[auction theory]], [[mechanism design]], contests and [[matching theory (economics)|matching theory]], and [[voting theory]].<ref>[http://www.hcm.uni-bonn.de/people/profile/benny-moldovanu/ Profile of Benny Moldovanu on the website of the Hausdorff Center for Mathematics. Retrieved May 2nd, 2018.]</ref> In his research, he has particularly often collaborated with [[Philippe Jehiel]] ([[Paris School of Economics]]).<ref>[https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=iR7AU5QAAAAJ&hl=de Overview of Benny Moldovanu's publications at Google Scholar. Retrieved May 3rd, 2018.]</ref> According to [[IDEAS/RePEc]], he belongs to the top 3% of economists in terms of research output.<ref>[https://ideas.repec.org/top/top.person.all.html#pmo12 Ranking of economists registered on IDEAS/RePEc. Retrieved May 3rd, 2018.]</ref> In particular, his research has been recognized with the [[Max Planck Research Prize]] (2001) and [[Gossen Prize]] (2004) as well as fellowships of the [[Econometric Society]] (2004), [[European Economic Association]] (2009), and [[Game Theory Society]] (2017).<ref>[https://www.econ2.uni-bonn.de/moldovanu Profile of Benny Moldovanu from the website of the University of Bonn. Retrieved May 3rd, 2018.]</ref>


=== Research on auctions===
=== Research on auctions===
One major area of Moldovanu's research concerns [[auction theory]], in particular the optimal design of auctions if participation in it subjects (some) participants to [[externality|externalities]]. For example, in a study of economic interactions under identity-dependent, asymmetric negative externalities with [[Philippe Jehiel]], Moldovanu finds that some agents' best strategy is to not participate in the market in order to minimize externalities, which may e.g. explain certain features of preemptive patenting.<ref>{{cite journal | url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/2555793 | jstor=2555793 | title=Strategic Nonparticipation | last1=Jehiel | first1=Philippe | last2=Moldovanu | first2=Benny | journal=The RAND Journal of Economics | year=1996 | volume=27 | issue=1 | pages=84–98 | doi=10.2307/2555793 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/2696358 | jstor=2696358 | title=Auctions with Downstream Interaction among Buyers | last1=Jehiel | first1=Philippe | last2=Moldovanu | first2=Benny | journal=The RAND Journal of Economics | year=2000 | volume=31 | issue=4 | pages=768–791 | doi=10.2307/2696358 }}</ref> Similarly, Moldovanu, Jehiel and Ennio Stacchetti find that for such economic transactions, e.g. the sale of [[nuclear weapon]], the outside options and participations constraints in a revenue-maximizing auction are endogenous, surplus can be extracted from non-acquiring participants, and the seller may be better off by not selling at all (while obtaining some payments) if externalities are much larger than valuations.<ref>{{cite journal | url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/2118306 | jstor=2118306 | last1=Jehiel | first1=Philippe | last2=Moldovanu | first2=Benny | last3=Stacchetti | first3=Ennio | title=How (Not) to Sell Nuclear Weapons | journal=The American Economic Review | year=1996 | volume=86 | issue=4 | pages=814–829 }}</ref> Later, Moldovanu, Jehiel and Stacchetti have provided a general theory for the design of incentive compatible mechanisms in auctions with buyer-specific externalities.<ref>{{cite journal | url=https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022053198925017 | doi=10.1006/jeth.1998.2501 | title=Multidimensional Mechanism Design for Auctions with Externalities | year=1999 | last1=Jehiel | first1=Philippe | last2=Moldovanu | first2=Benny | last3=Stacchetti | first3=Ennio | journal=Journal of Economic Theory | volume=85 | issue=2 | pages=258–293 | hdl=2027.42/100795 | hdl-access=free }}</ref> Moreover, Moldovanu and Jehiel have shown that multi-object auctions cannot be reduced to one-dimensional models without loss of generality because, in the presence of informational and allocative [[externality|externalities]], Bayes-Nash incentive compatible mechanisms exist only if private and social rates of information substitution are congruent, which in turn depends on whether signals are mono- or multi-dimensional.<ref>{{cite journal | url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/1468-0262.00240 | doi=10.1111/1468-0262.00240 | title=Efficient Design with Interdependent Valuations | year=2001 | last1=Jehiel | first1=Philippe | last2=Moldovanu | first2=Benny | journal=Econometrica | volume=69 | issue=5 | pages=1237–1259 | hdl=10419/221600 | hdl-access=free }}</ref> Finally, together with Jehiel, Moritz Meyer-ter-Vehn and William R. Zame, Moldovanu has explored the limits of ex post implementation, which requires each agents' strategy to be optimal for every possible realization of other agents' types.<ref>{{cite journal | url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/j.1468-0262.2006.00675.x | doi=10.1111/j.1468-0262.2006.00675.x | title=The Limits of ex post Implementation | year=2006 | last1=Jehiel | first1=Philippe | last2=Meyer-Ter-Vehn | first2=Moritz | last3=Moldovanu | first3=Benny | last4=Zame | first4=William R. | journal=Econometrica | volume=74 | issue=3 | pages=585–610 }}</ref>

One major area of Moldovanu's research concerns [[auction theory]], in particular the optimal design of auctions if participation in it subjects (some) participants to [[externality|externalities]]. For example, in a study of economic interactions under identity-dependent, asymmetric negative externalities with [[Philippe Jehiel]], Moldovanu finds that some agents' best strategy is to not participate in the market in order to minimize externalities, which may e.g. explain certain features of preemptive patenting.<ref>[https://www.jstor.org/stable/2555793?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents Jehiel, P., Moldovanu, B. (1996). Strategic nonparticipation. ''RAND Journal of Economics'', 27(1), pp. 84–98.]</ref><ref>[https://www.jstor.org/stable/2696358?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents Jehiel, P., Moldovanu, B. (2000). Auctions with downstream interaction among buyers. ''RAND Journal of Economics'', 31(4), pp. 768–791.]</ref> Similarly, Moldovanu, Jehiel and Ennio Stacchetti find that for such economic transactions, e.g. the sale of [[nuclear weapon]], the outside options and participations constraints in a revenue-maximizing auction are endogenous, surplus can be extracted from non-acquiring participants, and the seller may be better off by not selling at all (while obtaining some payments) if externalities are much larger than valuations.<ref>[https://www.jstor.org/stable/2118306?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents Jehiel, P., Moldovanu, B., Stacchetti, E. (1996). How (not) to sell nuclear weapons. ''American Economic Review'', 86(4), pp. 814–829.]</ref> Later, Moldovanu, Jehiel and Stacchetti have provided a general theory for the design of incentive compatible mechanisms in auctions with buyer-specific externalities.<ref>[https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022053198925017 Jehiel, P., Moldovanu, B., Stacchetti, E. (1999). Multidimensional mechanism design for auctions with externalities. ''Journal of Economic Theory'', 85(2), pp. 258–293.]</ref> Moreover, Moldovanu and Jehiel have shown that multi-object auctions cannot be reduced to one-dimensional models without loss of generality because, in the presence of informational and allocative [[externality|externalities]], Bayes-Nash incentive compatible mechanisms exist only if private and social rates of information substitution are congruent, which in turn depends on whether signals are mono- or multi-dimensional.<ref>[https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/1468-0262.00240 Jehiel, P., Moldovanu, B. (2001). Efficient design with interdependent valuations. ''Econometrica'', 69(5), pp. 1237–1259.]</ref> Finally, together with Jehiel, Moritz Meyer-ter-Vehn and William R. Zame, Moldovanu has explored the limits of ex post implementation, which requires each agents' strategy to be optimal for every possible realization of other agents' types.<ref>[https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/j.1468-0262.2006.00675.x Jehiel, P. et al. (2006). The limits of ex post implementation. ''Econometrica'', 74(3), pp. 585–610.]</ref>


=== Research on contests and matching===
=== Research on contests and matching===
Another major area of Moldovanu's research regards the design of contests and [[matching theory (economics)|assortative matching]]. Studying the optimal allocation of prizes in contests with multiple, nonidentical prizes, private information about participants' cost of effort and prize allocation based on effort together with [[Aner Sela]], Moldovanu finds that the allocation of the prize sum which maximizes expected total effort depends on participants' cost functions: if they are convex, several positive prizes may be optimal, otherwise allocating the entire prize sum to a single "first" prize is optimal.<ref>{{cite journal | url=https://www.aeaweb.org/articles?id=10.1257/aer.91.3.542 | doi=10.1257/aer.91.3.542 | title=The Optimal Allocation of Prizes in Contests | year=2001 | last1=Moldovanu | first1=Benny | last2=Sela | first2=Aner | journal=American Economic Review | volume=91 | issue=3 | pages=542–558 }}</ref> In another study with Sela on the architecture of contests, Moldovanu shows that the optimal split of contest participants among tournament-style sub-contests depends on the type of effort maximized and (again) on participants' effort cost functions: if they are linear, then expected total effort is maximized through a single static contest and expected highest effort is maximized through a two-stage contest with two sub-contests (assuming sufficient participants); but if they are convex, effort may be maximized through several sub-contests or the award of prizes to all finalists.<ref>{{cite journal | url=https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022053104002200 | doi=10.1016/j.jet.2004.10.004 | title=Contest architecture | year=2006 | last1=Moldovanu | first1=Benny | last2=Sela | first2=Aner | journal=Journal of Economic Theory | volume=126 | pages=70–96 }}</ref> If, however, contestants care about their relative positioning into status strata, Moldovanu, Sela and Xianwen Shi find that the optimal partition in status categories depends on the distribution of ability among contests, though the top status category always only contains a single winner; in particular, assuming a concave distribution, a partition with only two strata would already be optimal.<ref>{{cite journal | url=https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.1086/518010 | doi=10.1086/518010 | title=Contests for Status | year=2007 | last1=Moldovanu | first1=Benny | last2=Sela | first2=Aner | last3=Shi | first3=Xianwen | journal=Journal of Political Economy | volume=115 | issue=2 | pages=338–363 | s2cid=18198128 }}</ref> Finally, together with Sela and Heidrun Hoppe, Moldovanu has explored the assortative matching of a finite number of agents in two-sided markets under incomplete information on the basis of costly signals.<ref>{{Cite journal |url=https://academic.oup.com/restud/article-abstract/76/1/253/1576712 |doi=10.1111/j.1467-937X.2008.00517.x |title=The Theory of Assortative Matching Based on Costly Signals |year=2009 |last1=Hoppe |first1=Heidrun C. |last2=Moldovanu |first2=Benny |last3=Sela |first3=Aner |journal=Review of Economic Studies |volume=76 |pages=253–281 |s2cid=15972765 |hdl=10419/93836 |hdl-access=free }}</ref>

Another major area of Moldovanu's research regards the design of contests and [[matching theory (economics)|assortative matching]]. Studying the optimal allocation of prizes in contests with multiple, nonidentical prizes, private information about participants' cost of effort and prize allocation based on effort together with [[Aner Sela]], Moldovanu finds that the allocation of the prize sum which maximizes expected total effort depends on participants' cost functions: if they are convex, several positive prizes may be optimal, otherwise allocating the entire prize sum to a single "first" prize is optimal.<ref>[https://www.aeaweb.org/articles?id=10.1257/aer.91.3.542 Moldovanu, B., Sela, A. (2001). The optimal allocation of prizes in contests. ''American Economic Review'', 91(3), pp. 542–558.]</ref> In another study with Sela on the architecture of contests, Moldovanu shows that the optimal split of contest participants among tournament-style sub-contests depends on the type of effort maximized and (again) on participants' effort cost functions: if they are linear, then expected total effort is maximized through a single static contest and expected highest effort is maximized through a two-stage contest with two sub-contests (assuming sufficient participants); but if they are convex, effort may be maximized through several sub-contests or the award of prizes to all finalists.<ref>[https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022053104002200 Moldovanu, B., Sela, A. (2006). Contest architecture. ''Journal of Economic Theory'', 126(1), pp. 70–96.]</ref> If, however, contestants care about their relative positioning into status strata, Moldovanu, Sela and Xianwen Shi find that the optimal partition in status categories depends on the distribution of ability among contests, though the top status category always only contains a single winner; in particular, assuming a concave distribution, a partition with only two strata would already be optimal.<ref>[https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.1086/518010 Moldovanu, B., Sela, A., Shi, X. (2007). Contests for status. ''Journal of Political Economy'', 115(2), pp. 338–363.]</ref> Finally, together with Sela and Heidrun Hoppe, Moldovanu has explored the assortative matching of a finite number of agents in two-sided markets under incomplete information on the basis of costly signals.<ref>[https://academic.oup.com/restud/article-abstract/76/1/253/1576712 Hoppe, H.C., Moldovanu, B., Sela, A. (2009). The theory of assortative matching based on costly signals. ''Review of Economic Studies'', 76(1), pp. 253–281.]</ref>


== Selected publications==
== Selected publications==
* Gershkov, A., Moldovanu, A. (2014). ''Dynamic Allocation and Pricing: A Mechanism Design Approach''. Cambridge, MA: [[MIT Press]].

* Gershkov, A., Moldovanu, A. (2014). ''Dynamic Allocation and Pricing: A Mechanism Design Approach''. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.


== References==
== References==

{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}

== External links==

* [https://www.econ2.uni-bonn.de/moldovanu Profile of Benny Moldovanu on the website of the University of Bonn]
* [https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=iR7AU5QAAAAJ&hl=de Profile of Benny Moldovanu at Google Scholar]


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[[Category:University of Bonn alumni]]
[[Category:Game theorists]]
[[Category:Game theorists]]
[[Category:German economists]]
[[Category:German economists]]
[[Category:Israeli economists]]
[[Category:Academic staff of the University of Mannheim]]
[[Category:University of Bonn faculty]]
[[Category:Academic staff of the University of Bonn]]
[[Category:Fellows of the Econometric Society]]
[[Category:Fellows of the Econometric Society]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Fellows of the European Economic Association]]

Latest revision as of 08:14, 15 January 2024

Benny Moldovanu (born April 11, 1962) is a German economist who currently holds the Chair of Economic Theory II at the University of Bonn.[1] His research focuses on applied game theory, auction theory, mechanism design, contests and matching theory, and voting theory.[2] In 2004, Moldovanu was awarded the Gossen Prize for his contributions to auction theory and mechanism design.[3]

Biography

[edit]

Benny Moldovanu earned a BSc and MSc in mathematics from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 1986 and 1989, respectively, the latter under the supervision of Bezalel Peleg. He then obtained in 1991 a PhD in economics from the University of Bonn, with future Nobel Memorial Prize winner Reinhard Selten as advisor and Avner Shaked as co-advisor, with thesis "Game theory, economics, social and behavioral sciences".[4] He went on to earn his habilitation from the same university in 1995. Having worked as assistant professor of economics at the University of Bonn after his PhD (1991–1995), he then became full professor at the University of Mannheim (1995–2002) before returning to the University of Bonn in 2002, where he has worked ever since. At Bonn, he has been the Co-Director and later Academic Director of the Bonn Graduate School of Economics (2006–2013) as well as Co-Director of the Hausdorff Center for Mathematics (2006–2013), where he today leads the research area on mechanism design and game theory.[2] Moreover, at Bonn, Moldovanu is currently Director of the Institute of Microeconomics (since 2012) as well as of the Reinhard Selten Institute for Research in Economics (since 2017).[5] Throughout his professional career, Moldovanu has held visiting appointments at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Northwestern University, University College London, Yale University, Tel Aviv University, and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. In terms of professional activities, he has been a member of the Councils of the European Economic Association and Game Theory Society, is a research fellow at the Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR), and has chaired the Scientific Committees of the Econometric Society and German Economic Association. Finally, he has performed editorial duties for Econometrica, Journal of the European Economic Association, Games and Economic Behavior, Journal of Economic Theory, and Economic Policy.[1]

Research

[edit]

Benny Moldovanu's research focuses on applied game theory, auction theory, mechanism design, contests and matching theory, and voting theory.[2] In his research, he has particularly often collaborated with Philippe Jehiel (Paris School of Economics).[6] According to IDEAS/RePEc, he belongs to the top 3% of economists in terms of research output.[7] In particular, his research has been recognized with the Max Planck Research Prize (2001) and Gossen Prize (2004) as well as fellowships of the Econometric Society (2004), European Economic Association (2009), and Game Theory Society (2017).[1]

Research on auctions

[edit]

One major area of Moldovanu's research concerns auction theory, in particular the optimal design of auctions if participation in it subjects (some) participants to externalities. For example, in a study of economic interactions under identity-dependent, asymmetric negative externalities with Philippe Jehiel, Moldovanu finds that some agents' best strategy is to not participate in the market in order to minimize externalities, which may e.g. explain certain features of preemptive patenting.[8][9] Similarly, Moldovanu, Jehiel and Ennio Stacchetti find that for such economic transactions, e.g. the sale of nuclear weapon, the outside options and participations constraints in a revenue-maximizing auction are endogenous, surplus can be extracted from non-acquiring participants, and the seller may be better off by not selling at all (while obtaining some payments) if externalities are much larger than valuations.[10] Later, Moldovanu, Jehiel and Stacchetti have provided a general theory for the design of incentive compatible mechanisms in auctions with buyer-specific externalities.[11] Moreover, Moldovanu and Jehiel have shown that multi-object auctions cannot be reduced to one-dimensional models without loss of generality because, in the presence of informational and allocative externalities, Bayes-Nash incentive compatible mechanisms exist only if private and social rates of information substitution are congruent, which in turn depends on whether signals are mono- or multi-dimensional.[12] Finally, together with Jehiel, Moritz Meyer-ter-Vehn and William R. Zame, Moldovanu has explored the limits of ex post implementation, which requires each agents' strategy to be optimal for every possible realization of other agents' types.[13]

Research on contests and matching

[edit]

Another major area of Moldovanu's research regards the design of contests and assortative matching. Studying the optimal allocation of prizes in contests with multiple, nonidentical prizes, private information about participants' cost of effort and prize allocation based on effort together with Aner Sela, Moldovanu finds that the allocation of the prize sum which maximizes expected total effort depends on participants' cost functions: if they are convex, several positive prizes may be optimal, otherwise allocating the entire prize sum to a single "first" prize is optimal.[14] In another study with Sela on the architecture of contests, Moldovanu shows that the optimal split of contest participants among tournament-style sub-contests depends on the type of effort maximized and (again) on participants' effort cost functions: if they are linear, then expected total effort is maximized through a single static contest and expected highest effort is maximized through a two-stage contest with two sub-contests (assuming sufficient participants); but if they are convex, effort may be maximized through several sub-contests or the award of prizes to all finalists.[15] If, however, contestants care about their relative positioning into status strata, Moldovanu, Sela and Xianwen Shi find that the optimal partition in status categories depends on the distribution of ability among contests, though the top status category always only contains a single winner; in particular, assuming a concave distribution, a partition with only two strata would already be optimal.[16] Finally, together with Sela and Heidrun Hoppe, Moldovanu has explored the assortative matching of a finite number of agents in two-sided markets under incomplete information on the basis of costly signals.[17]

Selected publications

[edit]
  • Gershkov, A., Moldovanu, A. (2014). Dynamic Allocation and Pricing: A Mechanism Design Approach. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c "Prof. Dr. Benny Moldovanu". www.econ2.uni-bonn.de. University of Bonn. Retrieved April 30, 2023.
  2. ^ a b c "Prof. Dr. Benny Moldovanu". www.hcm.uni-bonn.de. Hausdorff Center for Mathematics. Retrieved April 30, 2023.
  3. ^ List of Gossen Prize winners. Retrieved May 2nd, 2018.
  4. ^ Benny Moldovanu at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  5. ^ Reinhard Selten Institute (April 3rd, 2017). Reinhard Selten Institute (RSI) founded. Retrieved May 3rd, 2018.
  6. ^ Benny Moldovanu publications indexed by Google Scholar
  7. ^ Ranking of economists registered on IDEAS/RePEc. Retrieved May 3rd, 2018.
  8. ^ Jehiel, Philippe; Moldovanu, Benny (1996). "Strategic Nonparticipation". The RAND Journal of Economics. 27 (1): 84–98. doi:10.2307/2555793. JSTOR 2555793.
  9. ^ Jehiel, Philippe; Moldovanu, Benny (2000). "Auctions with Downstream Interaction among Buyers". The RAND Journal of Economics. 31 (4): 768–791. doi:10.2307/2696358. JSTOR 2696358.
  10. ^ Jehiel, Philippe; Moldovanu, Benny; Stacchetti, Ennio (1996). "How (Not) to Sell Nuclear Weapons". The American Economic Review. 86 (4): 814–829. JSTOR 2118306.
  11. ^ Jehiel, Philippe; Moldovanu, Benny; Stacchetti, Ennio (1999). "Multidimensional Mechanism Design for Auctions with Externalities". Journal of Economic Theory. 85 (2): 258–293. doi:10.1006/jeth.1998.2501. hdl:2027.42/100795.
  12. ^ Jehiel, Philippe; Moldovanu, Benny (2001). "Efficient Design with Interdependent Valuations". Econometrica. 69 (5): 1237–1259. doi:10.1111/1468-0262.00240. hdl:10419/221600.
  13. ^ Jehiel, Philippe; Meyer-Ter-Vehn, Moritz; Moldovanu, Benny; Zame, William R. (2006). "The Limits of ex post Implementation". Econometrica. 74 (3): 585–610. doi:10.1111/j.1468-0262.2006.00675.x.
  14. ^ Moldovanu, Benny; Sela, Aner (2001). "The Optimal Allocation of Prizes in Contests". American Economic Review. 91 (3): 542–558. doi:10.1257/aer.91.3.542.
  15. ^ Moldovanu, Benny; Sela, Aner (2006). "Contest architecture". Journal of Economic Theory. 126: 70–96. doi:10.1016/j.jet.2004.10.004.
  16. ^ Moldovanu, Benny; Sela, Aner; Shi, Xianwen (2007). "Contests for Status". Journal of Political Economy. 115 (2): 338–363. doi:10.1086/518010. S2CID 18198128.
  17. ^ Hoppe, Heidrun C.; Moldovanu, Benny; Sela, Aner (2009). "The Theory of Assortative Matching Based on Costly Signals". Review of Economic Studies. 76: 253–281. doi:10.1111/j.1467-937X.2008.00517.x. hdl:10419/93836. S2CID 15972765.