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596. The Rules of Life’s Everyday Markets & How to Get Them to Work in Your Favor feat. Judd Kessler
Manage episode 518919211 series 3305636
What if you could find a strategy for gaming the systems all around to work more in your favor? If you did, then things like coveted restaurant reservations, scarce concert tickets, landing the dream job, or even admission to top colleges could become much more in reach.
Judd Kessler is a professor of business economics and public policy at the Wharton School and the author of Lucky by Design: The Hidden Economics You Need to Get More of What You Want. The book acts as a guide for not only participants in the everyday markets that shape our lives, but also the designers of those markets.
Judd and Greg discuss the hidden markets that dictate restaurant reservations, concert tickets, college admissions, and even dating. They explore different market design strategies like allocation mechanisms, centralized clearinghouses, and signaling.
*unSILOed Podcast is produced by University FM.*
Episode Quotes:
Why some markets don’t play by price rules
03:51: So many of the markets that we play in do not resolve themselves with the price rising. Either the price stays low because the seller wants it that way, and there's going to be excess demand—more people that want the thing than there are units available at that price—or we have decided as a society that we're not going to use prices to do the allocations, that it would be fundamentally unfair, or it would be fundamentally inefficient because we don't think your willingness to pay truly captures how much you value it.
How market participants get ahead by knowing the rules
01:33: When you are a market participant, you can do better by understanding the market rules and thinking about how to play in them.
The three E’s of a good market
13:59: A good market will achieve the three E's: efficiency, equity, and being easy for market participants. And so what you've just tapped into is efficiency. And that's what makes this subfield of economics interesting, that there is no mechanism that satisfies all three of those perfectly all the time.
Show Links:
Recommended Resources:
- Labubu
- Better Online Tickets Sales Act
- Alvin E. Roth
- National Resident Matching Program
- American Economic Association
- Donald Mackenzie | unSILOed
Guest Profile:
- Faculty Profile at Wharton School of Business
- Professional Website
- LinkedIn Profile
- X Profile
Guest Work:
Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
581 episodes
596. The Rules of Life’s Everyday Markets & How to Get Them to Work in Your Favor feat. Judd Kessler
Manage episode 518919211 series 3305636
What if you could find a strategy for gaming the systems all around to work more in your favor? If you did, then things like coveted restaurant reservations, scarce concert tickets, landing the dream job, or even admission to top colleges could become much more in reach.
Judd Kessler is a professor of business economics and public policy at the Wharton School and the author of Lucky by Design: The Hidden Economics You Need to Get More of What You Want. The book acts as a guide for not only participants in the everyday markets that shape our lives, but also the designers of those markets.
Judd and Greg discuss the hidden markets that dictate restaurant reservations, concert tickets, college admissions, and even dating. They explore different market design strategies like allocation mechanisms, centralized clearinghouses, and signaling.
*unSILOed Podcast is produced by University FM.*
Episode Quotes:
Why some markets don’t play by price rules
03:51: So many of the markets that we play in do not resolve themselves with the price rising. Either the price stays low because the seller wants it that way, and there's going to be excess demand—more people that want the thing than there are units available at that price—or we have decided as a society that we're not going to use prices to do the allocations, that it would be fundamentally unfair, or it would be fundamentally inefficient because we don't think your willingness to pay truly captures how much you value it.
How market participants get ahead by knowing the rules
01:33: When you are a market participant, you can do better by understanding the market rules and thinking about how to play in them.
The three E’s of a good market
13:59: A good market will achieve the three E's: efficiency, equity, and being easy for market participants. And so what you've just tapped into is efficiency. And that's what makes this subfield of economics interesting, that there is no mechanism that satisfies all three of those perfectly all the time.
Show Links:
Recommended Resources:
- Labubu
- Better Online Tickets Sales Act
- Alvin E. Roth
- National Resident Matching Program
- American Economic Association
- Donald Mackenzie | unSILOed
Guest Profile:
- Faculty Profile at Wharton School of Business
- Professional Website
- LinkedIn Profile
- X Profile
Guest Work:
Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
581 episodes
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