I study a simple equity-efficiency problem: A designer allocates a fixed amount of money to a population of agents differing in privately observed marginal values for money. She can only screen by imposing an “ordeal,” that is, by allocating more money to agents who engage in a socially wasteful activity (such as queuing or filling out forms). I show that giving a lump-sum transfer is outperformed by an ordeal mechanism when agents with the lowest money-denominated cost of engaging in the wasteful activity have an expected value for money that exceeds the average value by more than a factor of two.
Unpublished version
Published version
2026
@article{10.1257/mic.20230263,
Author = {Dworczak, Piotr},
Title = {How to Allocate Money?},
Journal = {American Economic Journal: Microeconomics},
Volume = {18},
Number = {1},
Year = {2026},
Month = {February},
Pages = {312–39},
DOI = {10.1257/mic.20230263},
}