Bargaining Efficiency and Screening: An Experimental Investigation
Economics Working Paper 284
35 Pages Posted: 28 Jun 1998
Abstract
This paper investigates whether information about generosity or fairness can be useful in lowering dispute costs and enhancing bargaining efficiency. Subjects were first screened using a dictator game, with the allocations chosen used to separate participants into two types. Mutually anonymous pairs of subjects then bargained, with a dispute cost structure imposed. Sorting with identification reduces dispute costs; there are also significant differences in bargaining efficiency across pairing types. Information about types is crucial for these differences and also strongly affects the relative bargaining success of the two types and the hypothetical optimal bargaining strategy.
JEL Classification: J52, C91, C78
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
By Catherine C. Eckel, Sheryl B. Ball, ...
-
An Experimental Comparison of Dispute Rates in Alternative Arbitration Systems
By Orley Ashenfelter, Janet Currie, ...
-
Buying Status: Experimental Evidence on Status in Negotiation
By Catherine C. Eckel and Sheryl B. Ball
-
By Bernardo A. Huberman, Christoph H. Loch, ...
-
Social Learning in Coordination Games: Does Status Matter?
By Catherine C. Eckel and Rick K. Wilson
-
By Gary E. Bolton and Elena Katok
-
Does Competition Affect Giving? An Experimental Study
By John Duffy and Tatiana Kornienko
-
Social Approval, Competition, and Cooperation
By Xiaofei Pan and Daniel Houser
-
Reaching for the Stars: An Experimental Study of the Consumption Value of Social Approval
By Matthias Greiff and Fabian Paetzel