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Who Gets What ― and Why

Who Gets What ― and Why

The New Economics of Matchmaking and Market Design
by Alvin E. Roth 2015 272 pages
3.85
2k+ ratings
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Key Takeaways

1. Markets are everywhere and shape our lives in profound ways

Economics is about the efficient allocation of scarce resources, and about making resources less scarce.

Markets permeate our lives. From the moment we wake up, we interact with countless markets that shape our choices and experiences. These range from commodity markets for everyday goods to complex matching markets for important life decisions like education and employment. Markets have evolved over time, with modern technology enabling new forms of exchange like smartphone-based ride-hailing and home-sharing platforms.

Market design matters. How markets are structured significantly impacts their effectiveness and outcomes. Well-designed markets efficiently match buyers and sellers, facilitate information sharing, and create value. Poorly designed markets can lead to inefficiency, unfairness, or failure. Economists increasingly study market design to understand how to engineer better systems.

Key elements of good market design:

  • Thickness: Attracting enough participants
  • Lack of congestion: Ability to process transactions quickly
  • Safety: Ensuring participants can trust the marketplace
  • Simplicity: Making it easy for people to participate effectively

2. Unraveling: When markets move too soon and lose thickness

You can't just inform Yale University that you're enrolling or Google that you're showing up for work. You also have to be admitted or hired.

Timing is crucial in markets. When transactions occur too early, before important information is available, it can lead to poor matches and inefficiency. This phenomenon, known as "unraveling," has been observed in various markets, from college football bowl game selections to hiring for prestigious jobs.

Self-control is often insufficient. Even when participants recognize the collective benefit of waiting, individual incentives often drive them to transact early. This can create a race to be first, leading to a suboptimal outcome for everyone. Market designers have developed various strategies to combat unraveling:

Approaches to prevent unraveling:

  • Enforcing uniform transaction dates
  • Implementing centralized clearinghouses
  • Creating mechanisms that make it safe to reveal true preferences
  • Allowing for easy reneging on early agreements

3. Market congestion: The challenges of processing transactions quickly

Congestion is a little like rush-hour traffic in a big city.

Thick markets can become overwhelmed. When many participants want to transact simultaneously, it can lead to congestion. This is particularly challenging in matching markets where each transaction requires individual consideration, unlike commodity markets where prices can efficiently clear the market.

Design solutions to manage congestion. Market designers have developed various approaches to handle congestion while maintaining the benefits of thick markets:

Strategies to combat congestion:

  • Implementing batch processing of transactions
  • Creating structured timing for offers and responses
  • Utilizing computer algorithms to quickly process complex preferences
  • Designing user interfaces that streamline decision-making

Real-world examples. The redesign of the New York City high school matching system and the National Resident Matching Program for doctors demonstrate how addressing congestion can dramatically improve market outcomes.

4. Trust and safety: Essential components of successful marketplaces

Making markets safe is one of the oldest problems of market design, going back to well before the invention of agriculture, when hunters traded the ax heads and arrowheads that archaeologists today find thousands of miles from where they were made.

Trust underpins exchange. For markets to function effectively, participants need to feel confident that they won't be cheated or harmed. This applies to both physical safety and the reliability of transactions. Historically, rulers played a crucial role in providing safe passage to markets. Today, various mechanisms ensure trust in modern marketplaces.

Building trust in the digital age. Online platforms face unique challenges in creating safe environments for strangers to transact. Successful marketplaces have developed multi-faceted approaches:

Elements of trust-building in online markets:

  • User verification and background checks
  • Review and rating systems
  • Secure payment processing
  • Insurance and guarantees
  • Clear dispute resolution procedures

Balancing transparency and privacy. While sharing information can build trust, markets must also protect users' sensitive data. Finding the right balance is an ongoing challenge for market designers.

5. Signaling: Communicating information effectively in markets

Sometimes a matching process, whether formal or ad hoc, evolves over time. But sometimes, especially recently, it is designed.

Information is crucial, but costly. In many markets, participants have private information that would be valuable to others. However, simply claiming to have desirable qualities is often not credible. Effective signaling mechanisms allow participants to credibly communicate important information.

Designing effective signaling systems. Market designers have developed various approaches to facilitate valuable information exchange:

Signaling strategies in markets:

  • Costly signals (e.g., education as a signal of ability)
  • Limited-use signals (e.g., "roses" in online dating)
  • Revelation mechanisms that make truthful reporting optimal
  • Reputation systems that aggregate past behavior

Applications across domains. Signaling plays a vital role in diverse markets, from job seekers demonstrating their qualifications to companies signaling product quality through warranties. Understanding how to design effective signaling mechanisms is crucial for many market design problems.

6. Repugnant transactions: When society objects to certain exchanges

Let's call a transaction repugnant if some people want to engage in it and other people don't want them to.

Social norms constrain markets. Even when willing buyers and sellers exist, societies often prohibit certain types of transactions deemed morally objectionable. Examples include bans on selling human organs, restrictions on prostitution, and historical prohibitions on charging interest.

Repugnance evolves over time. What is considered repugnant can change dramatically across cultures and historical periods. Market designers must be aware of these social constraints and how they might shift:

Factors influencing repugnance:

  • Concerns about exploitation or coercion
  • Beliefs about human dignity and commodification
  • Fears of negative societal consequences
  • Religious or cultural taboos

Navigating repugnance in design. When addressing pressing social needs that involve potentially repugnant transactions, market designers must find creative solutions. Kidney exchange systems that facilitate donation without direct payment are a prime example of working within social constraints to achieve positive outcomes.

7. Market design: Engineering better marketplaces for the future

Markets are human artifacts, not natural phenomena. Market design gives us a chance to maintain and improve some of humanity's most ancient, essential inventions.

Markets as technologies. Just as we engineer bridges and medicines, we can consciously design better markets. This perspective allows us to address market failures and create new opportunities for beneficial exchange. Market design combines insights from economics, computer science, and other fields to craft rules and mechanisms that achieve desired outcomes.

Principles of good market design:

Key considerations:

  • Aligning incentives of participants
  • Managing the flow of information
  • Balancing competing objectives (e.g., efficiency vs. fairness)
  • Scalability and robustness to strategic behavior
  • Adapting to technological and social changes

The future of market design. As technology advances and social needs evolve, market designers will continue to face new challenges and opportunities. From improving healthcare systems to addressing climate change through market mechanisms, the field has the potential to tackle some of society's most pressing issues.

Last updated:

Review Summary

3.85 out of 5
Average of 2k+ ratings from Goodreads and Amazon.

Who Gets What — and Why explores market design and matching markets, offering insights into how markets function beyond just price. Roth explains concepts like thickness, congestion, and safety in markets, using examples from kidney exchanges to school choice. While some readers found the book insightful and accessible, others criticized it for being repetitive or lacking depth. The author's Nobel Prize-winning work is frequently mentioned, which some viewed as boastful. Overall, the book provides a thought-provoking look at how markets shape our lives and can be engineered for better outcomes.

Your rating:

About the Author

Alvin Elliot Roth is an American economist and professor at Stanford University, previously at Harvard University. He is renowned for his contributions to game theory, market design, and experimental economics. Roth's work focuses on applying economic theory to solve real-world problems. His research has led to practical applications in various fields, including kidney exchange programs and school choice systems. In 2012, Roth was awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences jointly with Lloyd Shapley for their work on stable allocations and market design. His approach combines theoretical insights with practical implementation, making complex economic concepts accessible to broader audiences.

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