Entry into Winner-Take-All and Proportional-Prize Contests: An Experimental Study
27 Pages Posted: 6 Feb 2011
Date Written: April 1, 2010
Abstract
This experiment compares the performance of two contest designs: a standard winner-take-all tournament with a single fixed prize, and a novel proportional-payment design in which that same prize is divided among contestants by their share of total achievement. We find that proportional prizes elicit more entry and more total achievement than the winner-take-all tournament. The proportional-prize contest performs better by limiting the degree to which heterogeneity among contestants discourages weaker entrants, without altering the performance of stronger entrants. These findings could inform the design of contests for technological and other improvements, which are widely used by governments and philanthropic donors to elicit more effort on targeted economic and technological development activities.
Keywords: performance pay, tournament, piece rate, tournament design, contest, experiments, risk aversion, feedback, gender
JEL Classification: C72, D72, J33
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Experimental Comparison of Multi-Stage and One-Stage Contests
-
Self-Selection and the Efficiency of Tournaments
By Tor Eriksson, Sabrina Teyssier, ...
-
Can Groups Solve the Problem of Over-Bidding in Contests?
By Roman M. Sheremeta and Jingjing Zhang
-
A Survey of Experimental Research on Contests, All-Pay Auctions and Tournaments
By Emmanuel Dechenaux, Dan Kovenock, ...
-
The Non-Constant-Sum Colonel Blotto Game
By Brian Roberson and Dmitriy Kvasov
-
Two-Stage Contests with Budget Constraints: An Experimental Study
By James E. Parco, Wilfred Amaldoss, ...