- Holmström's theorem
In
economics , Holmström's theorem is animpossibility theorem attributed toBengt R. Holmström proving that no incentive system for a team of agents can make all of the following true:# Income equals outflow (the budget balances),
# The system has aNash equilibrium , and
# The system isPareto efficient .Thus a Pareto-efficient system with a balanced budget has a point at which an agent can do better by changing their effort level, if everyone else's effort level stays the same; a Pareto-efficient system with a Nash equilibrium does not distribute all revenue, or spends more than it has; and a system with a Nash equilibrium and balanced budget could allow some agents to do better without hurting any others.
The
Gibbard-Satterthwaite theorem insocial choice theory is a related impossibility theorem dealing withvoting system s.tatement of the theorem
Suppose there is a team of "n" > 1
risk neutral agents whosepreference functions are strictly concave and increasing, and also additively separable in money and effort. Then, under an incentive system that distributes exactly the output among the team members, any Nash equilibrium is Pareto inefficient.Rasmusen [Eric Rasmusen, "Moral Hazard in Risk-Averse Teams", "The RAND Journal of Economics" 18, no. 3 (1987), pp. 428–435.] studies the relaxation of this problem obtained by removing the assumption that the agents are risk neutral (Holmström: "linear in money").
References
* Bengt Holmström, "Moral Hazard in Teams", "The Bell Journal of Economics" 13, no. 2 (1982), pp. 324–340.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.