Kreps (1990) - Corporate Culture And Economic Theory

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Reference(s)

Kreps, D. (1990), "Corporate Culture and Economic Theory," in J. Alt and K. Shepsle, Eds. Perspectives on Positive Political Economy, Cambridge University Press (Book excerpts available through Google Books)

Abstract

No abstract available - this is a book chapter.

Summary

Until Kreps market beliefs were tied to a single entity or identity. Krep's contribution was to seperate identity from entity to create a long-lived reputation.

A Folk Theorem Model

Suppose there is a buyer and a seller involved in an infinitely repeated game. This game is like an infinitely repeated one-sided prisoner's dilemma or the infinitecentipede game. The game is sequential and the buyer moves first (though the same solution results from a simultaneous move game).

The buyer has actions:

[math]A_B \in [Trust, Not Trust]\,[/math]


The seller has actions:

[math]A_S \in [Honor, Abuse]\,[/math]


The pay-offs [math](\pi_B, \pi_A)\,[/math] are:

[math]Not Trust: (0,0)\,[/math]
[math]Trust, Abuse: (-1,2)\,[/math]
[math]Trust, Honor: (1,1)\,[/math]


The unique Nash equilibrium of the stage game is [math]Not Trust\,[/math], solved by backwards induction. However, when the game is infinitely repeated, [math]Trust, Honor\,[/math] can be sustained using a Grim Trigger, as per the Folk Theorem. The proof is simple - use the continuation values of the 'supported' equilibrium against those of the 'punishment' equilibrium for both players, and take the strictest requirement on the discount factor.

For the buyer:

[math]\underset{\text{Supported Continuation Value}}{\underbrace{ 1+\sum_{t=1}^{\infty} \Beta^t \cdot 1 }} \ge \underset{\text{Supported Continuation Value}}{\underbrace{0}}\,[/math]


For the seller:

[math]\underset{\text{Supported Continuation Value}}{\underbrace{ 1+\sum_{t=1}^{\infty} \Beta^t \cdot 1 }} \ge \underset{\text{Supported Continuation Value}}{\underbrace{2+0}}\,[/math]


Using the sum of an infintie geometric series:

As [math]n\,[/math] goes to infinity, the absolute value of [math]r\,[/math] must be less than one for the series to converge. The sum then becomes

[math]s \;=\; \sum_{k=0}^\infty ar^k = \frac{a}{1-r}\,[/math]


The strictest requirement on the discount factor is given by the seller's contraint which yields:

[math]\frac{1}{1-\beta} \ge 2 \; \therefore \beta \ge \frac{1}{2}\,[/math]


Short Lived Agents

The folk theorem implicitly requires that agents are long lived - the need a memory of whether anyone ever defected in the past to choose their strategy.