Monitoring, Moral Hazard, Asymmetric Information, and Risk Sharing in Procurement Contracting
This article characterizes the optimal procurement contract for a monopsonistic purchaser who contracts with a risk-averse supplier with private information about his costs and who contributes an unobservable effort. The costs incurred by the supplier may be uncertain, and the purchaser has access to a monitor of costs that may be subject to noise that complicates risk sharing. The purchaser prefers to respond to the observability problem with a fixed-price contract and to respond to the private information problem with a cost-plus contract. With uncertain costs and a perfect monitor the optimal contract relieves the supplier of some risk, and the purchaser prefers that the effort of the supplier be subsidized. With deterministic costs and a noisy monitor the optimal contract places risk on the supplier, and the purchaser may prefer that the effort of the supplier be taxed.
Year of publication: |
1987
|
---|---|
Authors: | Baron, David P. ; Besanko, David |
Published in: |
RAND Journal of Economics. - The RAND Corporation, ISSN 0741-6261. - Vol. 18.1987, 4, p. 509-532
|
Publisher: |
The RAND Corporation |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Regulation and information in a accounting relationship : final vers. received Jully 1984
Baron, David P., (1984)
-
Regulation, Asymmetric Information, and Auditing
Baron, David P., (1984)
-
Regulation and information in a continuing relationship
Baron, David P., (1984)
- More ...