Contracting with Imperfect Commitment: Minimal Canonical Contracts
Pith reviewed 2026-05-20 01:17 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Minimal canonical contract spaces fully characterize equilibrium outcomes in contracting with imperfect commitment under general preferences.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
We identify minimal canonical contract spaces that fully characterize equilibrium outcomes under general preferences in contracting with imperfect commitment. Our framework accommodates infinite agent type spaces, non-quasi-linear utilities, and settings where the principal lacks the commitment power typically assumed in information design. Moreover, our results apply to both single- and multi-principal environments, providing a unified and tractable approach to contracting under limited commitment.
What carries the argument
Minimal canonical contract spaces: the smallest collection of contracts whose equilibrium outcomes match all possible outcomes under imperfect commitment.
If this is right
- Equilibrium outcomes remain computable even when the set of possible agent types is uncountable.
- The same contract spaces work without change in both one-principal and several-principal settings.
- Analysis no longer requires quasi-linear payoffs or finite type spaces to reach a complete characterization.
- Dynamic contracting problems with limited commitment can be reduced to static problems over the canonical spaces.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The reduction might simplify numerical computation of equilibria in repeated procurement or regulation models.
- Multi-principal versions could be applied to competing platforms that cannot lock in future pricing rules.
- If the minimal spaces turn out to have a simple geometric structure, they may allow closed-form solutions for certain non-linear utility families.
Load-bearing premise
That a smallest set of contracts exists and can be found so that it still produces every equilibrium outcome when agent types form a continuum and utilities are not linear in money.
What would settle it
Exhibit one contracting game with a continuum of agent types in which every candidate minimal contract space leaves out at least one equilibrium outcome that is attainable under imperfect commitment.
read the original abstract
We study contracting with imperfect commitment and identify minimal canonical contract spaces that fully characterize equilibrium outcomes under general preferences. Different from previous solutions, our framework accommodates infinite agent type spaces (unlike Bester and Strausz (2001)), non-quasi-linear utilities (unlike Skreta (2006)), and settings where the principal lacks the commitment power typically assumed in information design (unlike Doval and Skreta (2021)). Moreover, our results apply to both single- and multi-principal environments, providing a unified and tractable approach to contracting under limited commitment.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper studies contracting with imperfect commitment and identifies minimal canonical contract spaces that fully characterize equilibrium outcomes under general preferences. It claims to accommodate infinite agent type spaces (unlike Bester and Strausz 2001), non-quasi-linear utilities (unlike Skreta 2006), and limited commitment (unlike Doval and Skreta 2021), while applying to both single- and multi-principal environments.
Significance. If the results on minimal canonical contract spaces hold, this would offer a unified and tractable approach extending prior work on limited commitment in contracting, with potential value for general preference settings and multi-principal cases.
major comments (1)
- [Abstract] Abstract: the central claim that minimal canonical contract spaces exist and fully characterize all equilibrium outcomes for infinite type spaces and non-quasi-linear utilities cannot be assessed, as the provided manuscript consists solely of the abstract with no derivations, constructions, proofs, or arguments visible.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their report. We respond to the major comment below.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: the central claim that minimal canonical contract spaces exist and fully characterize all equilibrium outcomes for infinite type spaces and non-quasi-linear utilities cannot be assessed, as the provided manuscript consists solely of the abstract with no derivations, constructions, proofs, or arguments visible.
Authors: The referee is correct that the excerpt supplied here contains only the abstract. The complete manuscript develops explicit constructions of the minimal canonical contract spaces, together with the proofs that these spaces characterize all equilibrium outcomes under the stated general preferences. These arguments explicitly cover infinite type spaces and non-quasi-linear utilities, and extend to both single- and multi-principal settings. The full paper is available on arXiv:2605.19884; we are happy to supply any specific section or proof upon request. revision: no
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; abstract provides no derivational content to inspect
full rationale
The available text consists solely of the abstract, which states the paper's goal of identifying minimal canonical contract spaces that characterize equilibria under general preferences, infinite type spaces, and non-quasi-linear utilities. No equations, proof steps, fitted parameters, self-citations, or ansatzes are present, so no load-bearing step can be shown to reduce to its own inputs by construction. The central claim is therefore not evaluable for circularity from the given material and must be treated as self-contained pending the full derivation.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
Lean theorems connected to this paper
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IndisputableMonolith/Foundation/RealityFromDistinction.leanreality_from_one_distinction unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
We study contracting with imperfect commitment and identify minimal canonical contract spaces that fully characterize equilibrium outcomes under general preferences.
What do these tags mean?
- matches
- The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
- supports
- The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
- extends
- The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
- uses
- The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
- contradicts
- The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
- unclear
- Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.
discussion (0)
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