Working paper

Mechanism Design with Costly Inspection

Amirreza Ahmadzadeh, and Stephan Waizmann

Abstract

This paper studies how to combine screening menus and inspection in mechanism design. A Principal procures a good from an Agent whose cost is his private information. The Principal has three instruments: screening menus —i.e., quantities and transfers — and (ex-ante) inspection. Inspection is costly but reveals the Agent’s cost. The combination of inspection and screening menus mitigates inefficiencies: the optimal mechanism procures an efficient quantity from all Agents whose cost of production is sufficiently low, regardless of whether inspection has taken place. However, quantity distortions still necessarily occur in optimal regulation; the quantity procured from Agents with higher production costs is inefficiently low. Both results are true regardless of the magnitude of inspection costs. In contrast to settings without inspection, incentive compatibility con-straints do not bind locally. This paper provides a method to address this challenge, characterizing which constraints bind.

Keywords

Mechanism Design; Verification; Principal-Agent; Inspection, Procurement;

JEL codes

  • D82: Asymmetric and Private Information • Mechanism Design
  • D86: Economics of Contract: Theory
  • L51: Economics of Regulation

Reference

Amirreza Ahmadzadeh, and Stephan Waizmann, Mechanism Design with Costly Inspection, TSE Working Paper, n. 24-1533, May 2024, revised September 2024.

See also

Published in

TSE Working Paper, n. 24-1533, May 2024, revised September 2024