

Mark Stegeman
Associate Professor of Economics
- Ph.D. Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Current Courses
- ECON 200, Basic Economics Issues
Research Interests
- Microeconomic theory
- Game theory
- Industrial organization
Publications
- "Advertising in Competitive Markets," American Economic Review 81:210-223 (1991).
- "Sufficient Conditions for Inessentiality," Econometrica 61:613-27 (1993).
- "Participation Costs and Efficient Auctions," Journal of Economic Theory 71:228-259 (1996).
- "Comment on 'Learning, Mutation, and Evolution in Games'" (with Paul Rhode), Econometrica 64:443-49 (1996).
- "Sequential Procurement Auctions with Subcontracting" (with Ian Gale and Donald Hausch), International Economic Review 41:989-1021 (2000).
- "Non-Nash Equilibria of Darwinian Dynamics" (with Paul Rhode), International Journal of Industrial Organization 19:415-454 (2001).
- "Sequential Auctions with Endogenous Valuations" (with Ian Gale), Games and Economic Behavior, 36:74-103 (2001).
- "Rigid Monopoly Prices," Advances in Applied Microeconomics (vol. 9, pp. 231-65), M. Baye, ed., Elsevier Science (New York), 2000.
- "Existence and Uniqueness of Maximal Reductions Under Iterated Strict Dominance" (with Martin Dufwenberg), Econometrica 70:2007-23 (2002).
- "Stochastic Darwinian Equilibria in Small and Large Populations" (with Paul Rhode), Games and Economic Behavior 49:171-214 (2004).
- “Leadership and Information” (with Mana Komai and Ben Hermalin), forthcoming American Economic Review.