Fernando Vega-Redondo's self-contained account of the main contributions  of modern game theory and its applications to economics starts with a  detailed description of how to model strategic situations. The  discussion proceeds by studying basic solution concepts and their main  refinements; games played under incomplete information; and repeated  games. For each of these theoretical developments, the text includes a  companion set of applications that cover the most representative  instances of game-theoretic analysis in economics (e.g., oligopolistic  competition, public goods, coordination failures, bargaining, insurance  markets, implementation theory, signaling and auctions).
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Economics and the Theory of Games (Repost)
Labels: Economics and finances