Coordination via Delay: Theory and Experiment

48 Pages Posted: 16 Apr 2020 Last revised: 8 Nov 2022

See all articles by Ye Jin

Ye Jin

New York University (NYU) - New York University (NYU), Shanghai

Zhen Zhou

Tsinghua University - PBC School of Finance

Adam Brandenburger

NYU Stern School of Business

Date Written: April 2, 2020

Abstract

This paper studies the effect of introducing an option of delay in coordination games, that is, of allowing players to wait and then choose between the risk-dominant and payoff-dominant actions. The delay option enables forward-induction reasoning to operate, whereby a player’s waiting and not choosing the risk-dominant action right away signals an intention to choose the payoff-dominant action later. If players have $\epsilon$-social preferences -- they help other players if at no cost to themselves -- then iterated weak dominance yields a unique outcome where everyone waits and then chooses the payoff-dominant action if everyone else waited. Thus, efficient coordination results. Experimental evidence from a binary-action minimum-effort game confirms that adding a delay option can significantly increase the occurrence of efficient outcomes. Moreover, consistent with our theory, the clear majority of subjects in our experiment take the unique iteratedly undominated strategy and not other strategies that are implied by equilibrium analysis.

Keywords: Coordination, Communication, Forward Induction, Iterated Weak Dominance

JEL Classification: C73, C92, D83

Suggested Citation

Jin, Ye and Zhou, Zhen and Brandenburger, Adam M., Coordination via Delay: Theory and Experiment (April 2, 2020). NYU Stern School of Business, PBCSF-NIFR Research Paper, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3566660 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3566660

Ye Jin (Contact Author)

New York University (NYU) - New York University (NYU), Shanghai ( email )

1555 Century Ave
Shanghai, Shanghai 200122
China

Zhen Zhou

Tsinghua University - PBC School of Finance ( email )

No. 43, Chengdu Road
Haidian District
Beijing 100083
China

Adam M. Brandenburger

NYU Stern School of Business ( email )

44 West 4th Street
New York, NY 10012
United States

HOME PAGE: http://www.stern.nyu.edu/~abranden

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