Title
Laws and Authority
Author(s)
George J. Mailath George Mailath (University of Pennsylvania)
Stephen Morris Stephen Morris (Princeton University)
Andrew Postlewaite Andrew Postlewaite (University of Pennsylvania)
Abstract
A law prohibiting a particular behavior does not directly change the payoff to an individual should he engage in the prohibited behavior. Rather, any change in the individual’s payoff, should he engage in the prohibited behavior, is a consequence of changes in other peoples' behavior. If laws do not directly change payoffs, they are "cheap talk," and can only affect behavior because people have coordinated beliefs about the effects of the law. Beginning from this point of view, we provide definitions of authority in a variety of problems, and investigate how and when individuals can have, gain, and lose authority.
Creation Date
2016-11
Section URL ID
Paper Number
082_2016
URL
http://detc.princeton.edu/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/wp082_2016_Mailath_Morris_Postlewaite_Laws-and-Authority.pdf
File Function
Jel
K00
Keyword(s)
Suppress
false
Series
10