Abstract:
This thesis consists of three independent essays. The first chapter introduces a model of
decision-making that is based on the procedure of rejection. Departing from the standard
model of choice via preference maximization, the decision maker (DM) rejects minimal
alternatives from a menu according to a preference relation. We axiomatically study the
correspondence of non-rejected alternatives which we call the acceptable correspondence
with different rationality conditions on the underlying preference relation. We also gen-
eralize our model to acceptable correspondences that are generated by the successive
elimination of minimal alternatives. We find that the rejection approach developed in
this chapter can offer explanations for various anomalies observed in decision theory,
such as the two-decoy effect or the two-compromise effect (Tserenjigmid (2019)).
The second chapter proposes a sequential model of the college admissions problem.
The selection criteria of institutions are formulated via choice rules that admit slot-
specific priorities introduced by Kominers and S¨onmez (2016). We show that the appli-
cants can not be worse off in the subsequent stages when the candidates update their
preferences that adhere to their assignment in the previous stage. Moreover, the mech-
anism that sequentially implements individual-proposing deferred acceptance is stable
with respect to a generalized version of a sequential stability notion provided in this
chapter. These results generalize the findings presented in Haeringer and Iehl´e (2021).
We use our results to analyze recently reformed admission procedures for engineering
colleges in India (Baswana et al. (2019)), where applicants are provided various options
to update their preferences in additional stages.
In the third chapter, we study the welfare consequences of merging Shapley–Scarf
housing markets (Shapley and Scarf (1974)). We show that in the worst-case scenario,
market integration can lead to large welfare losses and make the vast majority of agents
worse off. However, on average, the integration is welfare enhancing and makes all agents
better off ex-ante. The number of agents harmed by integration is a minority when all
markets are small or the agent’s preferences are highly correlated.