Naturally Occurring Markets and Exogenous Laboratory Experiments: A Case Study of the Winner's Curse

35 Pages Posted: 27 Jun 2007 Last revised: 21 Sep 2022

See all articles by Glenn W. Harrison

Glenn W. Harrison

Georgia State University - J. Mack Robinson College of Business

John A. List

University of Chicago - Department of Economics

Date Written: April 2007

Abstract

There has been a dramatic increase in the use of experimental methods in the past two decades. An oft-cited reason for this rise in popularity is that experimental methods provide the necessary control to estimate treatment effects in isolation of other confounding factors. We examine the relevance of experimental findings from laboratory settings that abstract from the field context of the task that theory purports to explain. Using common value auction theory as our guide, we identify naturally occurring settings in which one can test the theory. In our treatments the subjects are not picked at random, as in lab experiments with student subjects, but are deliberately identified by their trading roles in the natural field setting. We find that experienced agents bidding in familiar roles do not fall prey to the winner's curse. Yet, when experienced agents are observed bidding in an unfamiliar role, we find that they frequently fall prey to the winner's curse. We conclude that the theory predicts field behavior well when one is able to identify naturally occurring field counterparts to the key theoretical conditions.

Suggested Citation

Harrison, Glenn William and List, John A., Naturally Occurring Markets and Exogenous Laboratory Experiments: A Case Study of the Winner's Curse (April 2007). NBER Working Paper No. w13072, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=986922

Glenn William Harrison (Contact Author)

Georgia State University - J. Mack Robinson College of Business ( email )

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John A. List

University of Chicago - Department of Economics ( email )

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