Date
2004
Dewey
Economie financière
Sujet
Incomplete information; Repeated games; Imperfect monitoring; Completely revealing equilibria; Communication; Byzantine agreement
JEL code
C72; C73; D82; D83
Journal issue
Games and Economic Behavior
Volume
47
Number
1
Publication date
2004
Article pages
124-156
Publisher
Elsevier
Author
Renault, Jérôme
Tomala, Tristan
Type
Article accepté pour publication ou publié
Abstract (EN)
The motivation of this paper comes from repeated games with incomplete information and imperfect monitoring. It concerns the existence, for any payoff function, of a particular equilibrium (called completely revealing) allowing each player to learn the state of nature. We consider thus an interaction in which players, facing some incomplete information about the state of nature, exchange messages while imperfectly monitoring them. We then ask the question: can players learn the true state even under unilateral deviations? This problem is indeed closely related to Byzantine agreement problems from computer science. We define two different notions describing what a player can learn if at most one other player is faulty. We first link these notions with existence of completely revealing equilibria, then we characterize them for monitoring structures given by a graph. As a corollary we obtain existence of equilibria for a class of undiscounted repeated games.