David de Meza is the Eric Sosnow Professor of Management in the ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ Department of Management. His research interests include the property rights theory of the firm, optimism and entrepreneurship, and finance and insurance gaps in theory and practice.
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Managerial Economics and Strategy Faculty Research Group
Selected publications
de Meza, D. & Webb, D. C. (1987) Too much investment: a problem of asymmetric information. Quarterly Journal of Economics
de Meza, D. & Gould, J. R. (1992) The social efficiency of private decisions to enforce property rights. Journal of Political Economy
de Meza, D. & Southey, C. (1996) The borrower's curse: optimism, finance and entrepreneurship. The Economic Journal
de Meza, D. & Lockwood, B. (1998) Does asset ownership always motivate managers? Outside options and the property rights theory of the firm. Quarterly Journal of Economics
de Meza, D. & Webb, D. C. (2001) Advantageous selection in insurance markets. RAND Journal of Economics
de Meza, D. & Webb, D. C. (2017) False diagnoses: pitfalls of testing for asymmetric information in insurance markets. The Economic Journal
de Meza, D., Dawson, C., Henley, A.G., & Arabsheibani, G. (2019) Curb your enthusiasm: Optimistic entrepreneurs earn more. European Economic Review
de Meza, D. & Reito, F. (2020) Too much waste, not enough rationing: The failure of stochastic, competitive markets. Journal of Economic Theory
de Meza, D. & Dawson, C. (2020) Neither an optimist nor a pessimist Be: Mistaken expectations lower well-being. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin
de Meza, D. & Pathania, V. (2021) Is the second-cheapest wine a rip-off? Economics Letters