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Public-Good Provision with Macro Uncertainty about Preferences: Efficiency, Budget Balance, and Robustness

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  • Martin F. Hellwig

    (Max Planck Institute for Research on Collective Goods)

Abstract

The paper studies efficient public-good provision in a model with private values whose distribution depends on a macro shock; conditionally on this shock, values are independent and identically distributed. A generalization of the Bayesian mechanism of d'Aspremont and Gérard-Varet is shown to implement an efficient provision rule with budget balance. However, first-best implementation and budget balance are incompatible with a reqruirement of weak robustness whereby incentive compatibility of the mechanism is independent of the stochastic specification within the class of specifications defined by the structure of the model. Budget imbalances with robust implementation are small if there are many participants, as surplus from the Clarke-Groves mechanism converges to zero in probability when the number of participants becomes large. In the limit, with a continuum of agents, a first-best provision rule with equal cost sharing is robustly incentive-compatible. In this limit, information about the macro shock, which is the only thing that matters for public-good provision, can be elicited without any efficiency loss.

Suggested Citation

  • Martin F. Hellwig, 2021. "Public-Good Provision with Macro Uncertainty about Preferences: Efficiency, Budget Balance, and Robustness," Discussion Paper Series of the Max Planck Institute for Research on Collective Goods 2021_19, Max Planck Institute for Research on Collective Goods.
  • Handle: RePEc:mpg:wpaper:2021_19
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Felix J. Bierbrauer & Martin F. Hellwig, 2015. "Public-Good Provision in Large Economies," Discussion Paper Series of the Max Planck Institute for Research on Collective Goods 2015_12, Max Planck Institute for Research on Collective Goods.
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    9. Lei Qiao & Yeneng Sun & Zhixiang Zhang, 2016. "Conditional exact law of large numbers and asymmetric information economies with aggregate uncertainty," Economic Theory, Springer;Society for the Advancement of Economic Theory (SAET), vol. 62(1), pages 43-64, June.
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    14. Felix J. Bierbrauer & Martin F. Hellwig, 2016. "Robustly Coalition-Proof Incentive Mechanisms for Public Good Provision are Voting Mechanisms and Vice Versa," The Review of Economic Studies, Review of Economic Studies Ltd, vol. 83(4), pages 1440-1464.
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    Keywords

    Efficient public-good provision; incomplete information; conditionally independent private values; macro uncertainty; budget balance; weakly robust incentive compatibility;
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