Allocative Efficiency of Markets with Zero-Intelligence Traders: Market as a Partial Substitute for Individual Rationality.
This paper reports market experiments in which human traders are replaced by "zero-intelligence" programs that submit random bids and offers. Imposing a budget constraint (i.e., n ot permitting traders to sell below their costs or buy above their valu es) is sufficient to raise the allocative efficiency of these auctions close to 100 percent. Allocative efficiency of a double auction deri ves largely from its structure, independent of traders' motivation, intelligence, or learning. Adam Smith's invisible hand may be more powerful than some may have thought; it can generate aggregate rationality not only from individual rationality but also from individual irrationality. Copyright 1993 by University of Chicago Press.
Year of publication: |
1993
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Authors: | Gode, Dhananjay K ; Sunder, Shyam |
Published in: |
Journal of Political Economy. - University of Chicago Press. - Vol. 101.1993, 1, p. 119-37
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Publisher: |
University of Chicago Press |
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