Global coordination games belong to a subfield of
game theory which gained momentum with the article by Morris and Shin (1998). Stephen Morris and
Hyun Song Shin considered a stylized
currency crises model, in which traders observe the relevant fundamentals with small noise, and show that this leads to the selection of a unique equilibrium. This result is in stark contrast with models of
complete information, which feature multiple equilibria. Morris has also made important contributions to the theory of
mechanism design. In his work with Dirk Bergemann on robust mechanism design, they relaxed common knowledge assumptions which were prevalent in the early mechanism design literature. By formulating the mechanism design problem more precisely, they showed that simple mechanisms arise endogenously. This provided a theoretical justification for the relatively simple auction design employed in practice when compared to the complexity of optimal auctions suggested by the early literature. His two most recent contributions to the field of Economics are papers titled: 'Search, Information, and Prices' and 'Information, Market Power and Price Volatility,' published in the Journal of Political Economy and the RAND Journal of Economics respectively. Both of these papers were published in 2021. ==References==