An Experimental Study of the Holdout Problem in a Multilateral Bargaining Game

Abstract

When an economic exchange requires agreement by multiple independent parties, the potential exists for an individual to strategically delay agreement in an attempt to capture a greater share of the surplus created by the exchange. This "holdout problem" is a common feature of the land assembly literature because development frequently requires the assembly of multiple parcels of land. We use experimental methods to examine holdout behavior in a laboratory bargaining game that involves multi-person groups, complementary exchanges, and holdout externalities. The results of six treatments that vary the bargaining institution, number of bargaining periods, and the cost of delay demonstrate that holdout is common across institutions and is, on average, a payoff-improving strategy for responders. Both proposers and responders take a more aggressive initial bargaining stance in multi-period bargaining treatments relative to single-period treatments, but take a less aggressive bargaining stance when delay is costly. Nearly all exchanges eventually occur in our multi-period treatments, leading to higher overall efficiency relative to the single-period treatments, both with and without delay costs.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jan 01, 2007
Accession Number
ADA519530

Entities

People

  • John Cadigan
  • Kurtis Swope
  • Pamela Schmitt
  • Robert Shupp

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • C4I
  • Energy and Power Technologies
  • Human Systems

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Agreements
  • Agricultural Economics
  • Assembly
  • Bargaining
  • Data Science
  • Economic Analysis
  • Economics
  • Efficiency
  • Environment
  • Investments
  • Law
  • Negotiations
  • New York
  • Standards
  • United States
  • United States Naval Academy
  • Universities

Fields of Study

  • Economics

Readers

  • Game Theory.
  • Government and Public Administration Law.
  • Operations Research