Résumé
A matching market often requires recruiting agents, or ‘programmes’, to costly screen ‘applicants’, and congestion increases with the number of applicants to be screened. We investigate the role of application costs: higher costs reduce congestion by discouraging applicants from applying to certain programmes; however, they may harm match quality. In a multiple-elicitation experiment conducted in a real-life matching market, we implement variants of the Gale-Shapley deferred-acceptance mechanism with different application costs. Our experimental and structural estimates show that a (low) application cost effectively reduces congestion without harming match quality.
Mots-clés
Gale-Shapley Deferred Acceptance Mechanism; Costly Preference Formation; Screening; Stable Matching; Congestion; Matching Market Design;
Codes JEL
- C78: Bargaining Theory • Matching Theory
- D47: Market Design
- D50: General
- D61: Allocative Efficiency • Cost–Benefit Analysis
- I21: Analysis of Education
Remplace
Yinghua He et Thierry Magnac, « Application Costs and Congestion in Matching Markets », TSE Working Paper, n° 17-870, décembre 2017, révision février 2019.
Référence
Yinghua He et Thierry Magnac, « Application Costs and Congestion in Matching Markets », The Economic Journal, vol. 132, n° 648, novembre 2022, p. 2918–2950.
Voir aussi
Publié dans
The Economic Journal, vol. 132, n° 648, novembre 2022, p. 2918–2950