4.1 Article

Free riding and participation in large scale, multi-hospital kidney exchange

Journal

THEORETICAL ECONOMICS
Volume 9, Issue 3, Pages 817-863

Publisher

ECONOMETRIC SOCIETY
DOI: 10.3982/TE1357

Keywords

Market design; kidney exchange; D47; D82

Categories

Funding

  1. Direct For Social, Behav & Economic Scie
  2. Divn Of Social and Economic Sciences [1061932] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  3. Direct For Social, Behav & Economic Scie
  4. Divn Of Social and Economic Sciences [1061889] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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As multi-hospital kidney exchange has grown, the set of players has grown from patients and surgeons to include hospitals. Hospitals can choose to enroll only their hard-to-match patient-donor pairs, while conducting easily arranged exchanges internally. This behavior has already been observed. We show that as the population of hospitals and patients grows, the cost of making it individually rational for hospitals to participate fully becomes low in almost every large exchange pool (although the worst-case cost is very high), while the cost of failing to guarantee individual rationality is highin lost transplants. We identify a mechanism that gives hospitals incentives to reveal all patient-donor pairs. We observe that if such a mechanism were to be implemented and hospitals enrolled all their pairs, the resulting patient pools would allow efficient matchings that could be implemented with two- and three-way exchanges.

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