More is Less: Why Parties May Deliberately Write Incomplete Contracts

Maija Halonen-Akatwijuka (University of Bristol)

Riccardo Faini CEIS Seminars

Riccardo Faini CEIS Seminars
When

Friday, March 15, 2013 h. 12:00-13:30

Where
Room B - 1st floor
Description

Why are contracts incomplete? Transaction costs or asymmetric information cannot be a total explanation since states of the world are often easily describable and yet are not mentioned in a contract. We offer an explanation based on “contracts as reference points”. Including a contingency of the form, “The buyer will require a good in event E”, has a benefit and a cost. The benefit is that if E occurs there is less to argue about; the cost is that the additional reference point provided by the outcome in E can hinder (re)negotiation in states outside E. We show that if parties agree about a reasonable division of surplus, an incomplete contract can be strictly superior to a contingent contract. 

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