Volume 69, Issue 1 pp. 37-68
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Efficiency of Large Private Value Auctions

First published: 19 September 2008
Citations: 81

Abstract

We consider discriminatory and uniform price auctions for multiple identical units of a good. Players have private values, possibly asymmetrically distributed and for multiple units. Our setting allows for aggregate uncertainty about demand and supply. In this setting, equlibria generally will be inefficient. Despite this, we show that such auctions become arbitrarily close to efficient if they are “large,” and use this to derive an asymptotic characterization of revenue and bidding behavior.

Footnotes

  • I thank Eddie Dekel, Elchanan Ben-Porath, Joseph Harrington, Peter Klibanoff, George Mailath, Roger Myerson, Michael Peters, Bob Weber, Bill Zame, two referees, and an editor for helpful comments, and Ted Turocy and Tianxiang Ye for helpful comments and assistance in preparing the manuscript. I also thank seminar audiences at Iowa, Johns Hopkins, Wisconsin, Northwestern, the University of British Columbia, Warwick, the Stony Brook Summer Game Theory workshop, Miami, Chicago, Stanford, and Berkeley. Financial support from the NSF is gratefully acknowledged.
    • The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.