Rationale for Measurability, The

Citation:

Aumann, R. J. . (2001). Rationale for Measurability, The. Discussion Papers. presented at the 7, In G. Debreu, W. Neuefeind & W. Trockel (eds.) Economics Essays, A Festschrift for Werner Hildenbrand Springer, Berlin (2001), 5-7. Retrieved from /files/dp260.pdf

Abstract:

When modelling large economies by nonatomic measure spaces of agents, one defines "coalitions" as measurable - not arbitrary - sets of agents. Here we suggest a rationale for this restriction: "Real" economies have finitely many agents. In them, coalitions are associated with various measures, like total endowment, which play a vital role in the analysis. So in the model, too, one should be able to associate similar measures with coalitions; this means that they must be "measurable." Thus, though in the finite case a coalition is simply an arbitrary set of players, the appropriate generalization to the infinite case is not an arbitrary but a measurable set.

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