The motivating intuition is that the presence of nonmaximizing agents induces maximizing agents to take advantage of them and that this might magnify the effect of small deviations from maximizing behavior. This intuition is explored using a simple dynamic model. With an inflexible entry process, small deviations from maximizing behavior may have a substantial impact on the allocation of gains from trade. With a flexible entry process, the effect is dampened by adjustments in entry. Yet these deviations result in a first-order efficiency loss, in contrast to the second-order loss that one would expect from looking at standard static models. Copyright 1994, the President and Fellows of Harvard College and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
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