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Sequential bargaining

Sequential bargaining (also known as alternate-moves bargaining, alternating-offers protocol, etc.) is a structured form of bargaining between two participants, in which the participants take turns in making offers. Initially, person #1 has the right to make an offer to person #2. If person #2 accepts the offer, then an agreement is reached and the process ends. If person #2 rejects the offer, then the participants switch turns, and now it is the turn of person #2 to make an offer (which is often called a counter-offer). The people keep switching turns until either an agreement is reached, or the process ends with a disagreement due to a certain end condition. Several end conditions are common, for example:

  • There is a pre-specified limit on the number of turns; after that many turns, the process ends.
  • There is a pre-specified limit on the negotiation time; when time runs out, the process ends.
  • The number of possible offers is finite, and the protocol rules disallow to offer the same agreement twice. Hence, if the number of possible offers is finite, at some point all them are exhausted, and the negotiation ends without an agreement.

Several settings of sequential bargaining have been studied.

  • Dividing the Dollar: two people should decide how to split a given amount of money between them. If they do not reach an agreement, they get nothing. This setting can represent a buyer and a seller bargaining on the price of an item, where the valuations of both players are known. In this case, the amount of money is the difference between the buyer's value and the seller's value.
  • Buyer and Seller: a buyer and the seller bargain over the price of an item, and their valuations of the item are not known.
  • A general outcome set: there is an arbitrary finite set of possible outcomes, each of which yields a different payment to each of the two players. This setting can represent, for example, two parties who have to choose an agreed arbitrator from a given set of candidates.

Game-theoretic analysis edit

An alternating-offers protocol induces a sequential game. A natural question is what outcomes can be attained in an equilibrium of this game. At first glance, the first player has the power to make a very favorable offer. For example, in the Dividing the Dollar game, player #1 can offer to give only 1% of the money to player #2, and threaten that "if you do not accept, I will refuse all offers from now on, and both of us will get 0". But this is a non-credible threat, since if player #2 refuses and makes a counter-offer (e.g. give 2% of the money to player #1), then it is better for player #1 to accept. Therefore, a natural question is: what outcomes are a subgame perfect equilibrium (SPE) of this game? This question has been studied in various settings.

Dividing the dollar edit

Ariel Rubinstein studied a setting in which the negotiation is on how to divide $1 between the two players.[1] Each player in turn can offer any partition. The players bear a cost for each round of negotiation. The cost can be presented in two ways:

  1. Additive cost: the cost of each player i is ci per round. Then, if c1 < c2, the only SPE gives all the $1 to player 1; if c1 > c2, the only SPE gives $c2 to player 1 and $1-c2 to player 2.
  2. Multiplicative cost: each player has a discount factor di. Then, the only SPE gives $(1-d2)/(1-d1d2) to player 1.

Rubinstein and Wolinsky[2] studied a market in which there are many players, partitioned into two types (e.g. "buyers" and "sellers"). Pairs of players of different types are brought together randomly, and initiate a sequential-bargaining process over the division of a surplus (as in the Divide the Dollar game). If they reach an agreement, they leave the market; otherwise, they remain in the market and wait for the next match. The steady-state equilibrium in this market it is quite different than competitive equilibrium in standard markets (e.g. Fisher market or Arrow–Debreu market).

Buyer and seller edit

Fudenberg and Tirole[3] study sequential bargaining between a buyer and a seller who have incomplete information, i.e., they do not know the valuation of their partner. They focus on a two-turn game (i.e., the seller has exactly two opportunities to sell the item to the buyer). Both players prefer a trade today than the same trade tomorrow. They analyze the Perfect Bayesian equilibrium (PBE) in this game, if the seller's valuation is known, then the PBE is generically unique; but if both valuations are private, then there are multiple PBE. Some surprising findings, that follow from the information transfer and the lack of commitment, are:

  • The buyer may do better when he is more impatient;
  • Increasing the size of the "contract zone" may decrease the probability of agreement;
  • Prices can increase over time;
  • Increasing the number of periods can decrease efficiency.

Grossman and Perry[4] study sequential bargaining between a buyer and a seller over an item price, where the buyer knows the gains-from-trade but the seller does not. They consider an infinite-turn game with time discounting. They show that, under some weak assumptions, there exists a unique perfect sequential equilibrium, in which:

  • Players communicate their private information by revealing their willingness to delay the agreement;
  • The least patient buyers (that is, those whose gain from trade is larger) accept the seller's offer immediately;
  • The intermetiately-patient respond with an acceptable counter-offer;
  • the most patient respond with a counter-offer that they know the seller will not accept (and thus reveal the fact that they are patient).
  • The seller cannot credibly threaten to reject an offer above the discounted value of the game in which all buyers are intermetiately-patient.
  • If the seller gets an unacceptable offer, he updates his beliefs and the process repeats. This can go on for many rounds.

General outcome set edit

Nejat Anbarci[5] studied a setting with a finite number of outcomes, where each of the two agents may have a different preference order over the outcomes. The protocol rules disallow repeating the same offer twice. In any such game, there is a unique SPE. It is always Pareto optimal; it is always one of the two Pareto-optimal options of which rankings by the players are the closest. It can be found by finding the smallest integer k for which the sets of k best options of the two players have a non-empty intersection. For example, if the rankings are a>b>c>d and c>b>a>d, then the unique SPE is b (with k=2). If the rankings are a>b>c>d and d>c>b>a, then the SPE is either b or c (with k=3).

In a later study, Anbarci[6] studies several schemes for two agents who have to select an arbitrator from a given set of candidates:

  • In the Alternating Strike scheme, each agent in turn crosses off one candidate; the last remaining candidate is chosen. The scheme is not invariant to "bad" alternatives.
  • In contrast, the Voting by Alternating Offers and Vetoes scheme is invariant to bad alternatives.

In all schemes, if the options are uniformly distributed over the bargaining set and their number approaches infinity, then the unique SPE outcome converges to the Equal-Area solution of the cooperative bargaining problem.

Erlich, Hazon and Kraus[7] study the Alternating Offers protocol in several informational settings:

  • With complete information (each agent knows the other agents' full ranking), there are strategies that specify a subgame-perfect equilibrium for the agents, and can be computed in linear time. They implement a known bargaining rule.
  • With partial information (only one agent knows the other's ranking) and no information (one agent knows the other's ranking), there are other solution concepts that are distribution-free.

Experimental analysis edit

Laboratory studies edit

The Dividing-the-Dollar game has been studied in several laboratory experiments. In general, subjects behave quite differently from the unique SPE. Subjects' behavior depends on the number of turns, their experience with the game, and their beliefs about fairness. For details of specific experiments, see:

  • Güth, Schmittberger and Schwarze[8] at 1982.
  • Binmore, Shaked and Sutton[9] at 1985.
  • Güth and Tietz[10] at 1987.
  • Neelin, Sonnenschein and Spiegel[11] at 1988.
  • Ochs and Roth[12] at 1989.

See also the survey by Güth and Tietz[13] at 1990.

Field study edit

A field study was done by Backus, Blake, Larsen and Tadelis[14] at 2020. They studied back-and-forth sequential bargaining in over 25 million listings from the Best Offer platform of eBay. Their main findings are:

  • About 1/3 of the interactions end in immediate agreement, as predicted by complete-information models.
  • Most interactions end in disagreement or delayed agreement, as predicted by incomplete-information models.
  • Stronger bargaining power and better outside options improve agents’ outcomes.

They also report some findings that cannot be rationalized by the existing theories:

  • A reciprocal, gradual concession behavior, and delayed disagreement.
  • A preference for making and accepting offers that split the difference between the two most recent offers.

They suggest that these findings can be explained by behavioral norms.

Further reading edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Rubinstein, Ariel (1982). "Perfect Equilibrium in a Bargaining Model". Econometrica. 50 (1): 97–109. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.295.1434. doi:10.2307/1912531. JSTOR 1912531. S2CID 14827857.
  2. ^ Rubinstein, Ariel; Wolinsky, Asher (1985). "Equilibrium in a Market with Sequential Bargaining". Econometrica. 53 (5): 1133–1150. doi:10.2307/1911015. ISSN 0012-9682. JSTOR 1911015.
  3. ^ Fudenberg, Drew; Tirole, Jean (1983). "Sequential Bargaining with Incomplete Information". The Review of Economic Studies. 50 (2): 221–247. doi:10.2307/2297414. ISSN 0034-6527. JSTOR 2297414.
  4. ^ Grossman, Sanford J; Perry, Motty (1986-06-01). "Sequential bargaining under asymmetric information". Journal of Economic Theory. 39 (1): 120–154. doi:10.1016/0022-0531(86)90023-2. ISSN 0022-0531. S2CID 154201801.
  5. ^ Anbarci, N. (1993-02-01). "Noncooperative Foundations of the Area Monotonic Solution". The Quarterly Journal of Economics. 108 (1): 245–258. doi:10.2307/2118502. ISSN 0033-5533. JSTOR 2118502.
  6. ^ Anbarci, Nejat (2006-08-01). "Finite Alternating-Move Arbitration Schemes and the Equal Area Solution". Theory and Decision. 61 (1): 21–50. doi:10.1007/s11238-005-4748-9. ISSN 0040-5833. S2CID 122355062.
  7. ^ Erlich, Sefi; Hazon, Noam; Kraus, Sarit (2018-05-02). "Negotiation Strategies for Agents with Ordinal Preferences". arXiv:1805.00913 [cs.GT].
  8. ^ Güth, Werner; Schmittberger, Rolf; Schwarze, Bernd (1982-12-01). "An experimental analysis of ultimatum bargaining". Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization. 3 (4): 367–388. doi:10.1016/0167-2681(82)90011-7. ISSN 0167-2681.
  9. ^ Binmore, K.; Shaked, A.; Sutton, J. (1985). "Testing Noncooperative Bargaining Theory: A Preliminary Study". The American Economic Review. 75 (5): 1178–1180. ISSN 0002-8282. JSTOR 1818658.
  10. ^ Güth, Werner; Tietz, Reinhard (1988). Tietz, Reinhard; Albers, Wulf; Selten, Reinhard (eds.). "Ultimatum Bargaining for a Shrinking Cake — An Experimental Analysis —". Bounded Rational Behavior in Experimental Games and Markets. Lecture Notes in Economics and Mathematical Systems. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer. 314: 111–128. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-48356-1_9. ISBN 978-3-642-48356-1.
  11. ^ Neelin, Janet; Sonnenschein, Hugo; Spiegel, Matthew (1988). "A Further Test of Noncooperative Bargaining Theory: Comment". The American Economic Review. 78 (4): 824–836. ISSN 0002-8282. JSTOR 1811179.
  12. ^ Ochs, Jack; Roth, Alvin E. (1989). "An Experimental Study of Sequential Bargaining". The American Economic Review. 79 (3): 355–384. ISSN 0002-8282. JSTOR 1806850.
  13. ^ Güth, Werner; Tietz, Reinhard (1990-09-01). "Ultimatum bargaining behavior: A survey and comparison of experimental results". Journal of Economic Psychology. 11 (3): 417–449. doi:10.1016/0167-4870(90)90021-Z. ISSN 0167-4870.
  14. ^ Backus, Matthew; Blake, Thomas; Larsen, Brad; Tadelis, Steven (2020-08-01). "Sequential Bargaining in the Field: Evidence from Millions of Online Bargaining Interactions". The Quarterly Journal of Economics. 135 (3): 1319–1361. doi:10.1093/qje/qjaa003. ISSN 0033-5533.
  15. ^ "Game-Theoretic Models of Bargaining | Microeconomics". Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 2021-02-05.

sequential, bargaining, also, known, alternate, moves, bargaining, alternating, offers, protocol, structured, form, bargaining, between, participants, which, participants, take, turns, making, offers, initially, person, right, make, offer, person, person, acce. Sequential bargaining also known as alternate moves bargaining alternating offers protocol etc is a structured form of bargaining between two participants in which the participants take turns in making offers Initially person 1 has the right to make an offer to person 2 If person 2 accepts the offer then an agreement is reached and the process ends If person 2 rejects the offer then the participants switch turns and now it is the turn of person 2 to make an offer which is often called a counter offer The people keep switching turns until either an agreement is reached or the process ends with a disagreement due to a certain end condition Several end conditions are common for example There is a pre specified limit on the number of turns after that many turns the process ends There is a pre specified limit on the negotiation time when time runs out the process ends The number of possible offers is finite and the protocol rules disallow to offer the same agreement twice Hence if the number of possible offers is finite at some point all them are exhausted and the negotiation ends without an agreement Several settings of sequential bargaining have been studied Dividing the Dollar two people should decide how to split a given amount of money between them If they do not reach an agreement they get nothing This setting can represent a buyer and a seller bargaining on the price of an item where the valuations of both players are known In this case the amount of money is the difference between the buyer s value and the seller s value Buyer and Seller a buyer and the seller bargain over the price of an item and their valuations of the item are not known A general outcome set there is an arbitrary finite set of possible outcomes each of which yields a different payment to each of the two players This setting can represent for example two parties who have to choose an agreed arbitrator from a given set of candidates Contents 1 Game theoretic analysis 1 1 Dividing the dollar 1 2 Buyer and seller 1 3 General outcome set 2 Experimental analysis 2 1 Laboratory studies 2 2 Field study 3 Further reading 4 See also 5 ReferencesGame theoretic analysis editAn alternating offers protocol induces a sequential game A natural question is what outcomes can be attained in an equilibrium of this game At first glance the first player has the power to make a very favorable offer For example in the Dividing the Dollar game player 1 can offer to give only 1 of the money to player 2 and threaten that if you do not accept I will refuse all offers from now on and both of us will get 0 But this is a non credible threat since if player 2 refuses and makes a counter offer e g give 2 of the money to player 1 then it is better for player 1 to accept Therefore a natural question is what outcomes are a subgame perfect equilibrium SPE of this game This question has been studied in various settings Dividing the dollar edit Ariel Rubinstein studied a setting in which the negotiation is on how to divide 1 between the two players 1 Each player in turn can offer any partition The players bear a cost for each round of negotiation The cost can be presented in two ways Additive cost the cost of each player i is ci per round Then if c1 lt c2 the only SPE gives all the 1 to player 1 if c1 gt c2 the only SPE gives c2 to player 1 and 1 c2 to player 2 Multiplicative cost each player has a discount factor di Then the only SPE gives 1 d2 1 d1d2 to player 1 Rubinstein and Wolinsky 2 studied a market in which there are many players partitioned into two types e g buyers and sellers Pairs of players of different types are brought together randomly and initiate a sequential bargaining process over the division of a surplus as in the Divide the Dollar game If they reach an agreement they leave the market otherwise they remain in the market and wait for the next match The steady state equilibrium in this market it is quite different than competitive equilibrium in standard markets e g Fisher market or Arrow Debreu market Buyer and seller edit Fudenberg and Tirole 3 study sequential bargaining between a buyer and a seller who have incomplete information i e they do not know the valuation of their partner They focus on a two turn game i e the seller has exactly two opportunities to sell the item to the buyer Both players prefer a trade today than the same trade tomorrow They analyze the Perfect Bayesian equilibrium PBE in this game if the seller s valuation is known then the PBE is generically unique but if both valuations are private then there are multiple PBE Some surprising findings that follow from the information transfer and the lack of commitment are The buyer may do better when he is more impatient Increasing the size of the contract zone may decrease the probability of agreement Prices can increase over time Increasing the number of periods can decrease efficiency Grossman and Perry 4 study sequential bargaining between a buyer and a seller over an item price where the buyer knows the gains from trade but the seller does not They consider an infinite turn game with time discounting They show that under some weak assumptions there exists a unique perfect sequential equilibrium in which Players communicate their private information by revealing their willingness to delay the agreement The least patient buyers that is those whose gain from trade is larger accept the seller s offer immediately The intermetiately patient respond with an acceptable counter offer the most patient respond with a counter offer that they know the seller will not accept and thus reveal the fact that they are patient The seller cannot credibly threaten to reject an offer above the discounted value of the game in which all buyers are intermetiately patient If the seller gets an unacceptable offer he updates his beliefs and the process repeats This can go on for many rounds General outcome set edit Nejat Anbarci 5 studied a setting with a finite number of outcomes where each of the two agents may have a different preference order over the outcomes The protocol rules disallow repeating the same offer twice In any such game there is a unique SPE It is always Pareto optimal it is always one of the two Pareto optimal options of which rankings by the players are the closest It can be found by finding the smallest integer k for which the sets of k best options of the two players have a non empty intersection For example if the rankings are a gt b gt c gt d and c gt b gt a gt d then the unique SPE is b with k 2 If the rankings are a gt b gt c gt d and d gt c gt b gt a then the SPE is either b or c with k 3 In a later study Anbarci 6 studies several schemes for two agents who have to select an arbitrator from a given set of candidates In the Alternating Strike scheme each agent in turn crosses off one candidate the last remaining candidate is chosen The scheme is not invariant to bad alternatives In contrast the Voting by Alternating Offers and Vetoes scheme is invariant to bad alternatives In all schemes if the options are uniformly distributed over the bargaining set and their number approaches infinity then the unique SPE outcome converges to the Equal Area solution of the cooperative bargaining problem Erlich Hazon and Kraus 7 study the Alternating Offers protocol in several informational settings With complete information each agent knows the other agents full ranking there are strategies that specify a subgame perfect equilibrium for the agents and can be computed in linear time They implement a known bargaining rule With partial information only one agent knows the other s ranking and no information one agent knows the other s ranking there are other solution concepts that are distribution free Experimental analysis editLaboratory studies edit The Dividing the Dollar game has been studied in several laboratory experiments In general subjects behave quite differently from the unique SPE Subjects behavior depends on the number of turns their experience with the game and their beliefs about fairness For details of specific experiments see Guth Schmittberger and Schwarze 8 at 1982 Binmore Shaked and Sutton 9 at 1985 Guth and Tietz 10 at 1987 Neelin Sonnenschein and Spiegel 11 at 1988 Ochs and Roth 12 at 1989 See also the survey by Guth and Tietz 13 at 1990 Field study edit A field study was done by Backus Blake Larsen and Tadelis 14 at 2020 They studied back and forth sequential bargaining in over 25 million listings from the Best Offer platform of eBay Their main findings are About 1 3 of the interactions end in immediate agreement as predicted by complete information models Most interactions end in disagreement or delayed agreement as predicted by incomplete information models Stronger bargaining power and better outside options improve agents outcomes They also report some findings that cannot be rationalized by the existing theories A reciprocal gradual concession behavior and delayed disagreement A preference for making and accepting offers that split the difference between the two most recent offers They suggest that these findings can be explained by behavioral norms Further reading edit Game theoretic models of bargaining edited by Alvin Roth 15 See also editNegotiation Ultimatum game Offer and acceptance Fair division experimentsReferences edit Rubinstein Ariel 1982 Perfect Equilibrium in a Bargaining Model Econometrica 50 1 97 109 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 295 1434 doi 10 2307 1912531 JSTOR 1912531 S2CID 14827857 Rubinstein Ariel Wolinsky Asher 1985 Equilibrium in a Market with Sequential Bargaining Econometrica 53 5 1133 1150 doi 10 2307 1911015 ISSN 0012 9682 JSTOR 1911015 Fudenberg Drew Tirole Jean 1983 Sequential Bargaining with Incomplete Information The Review of Economic Studies 50 2 221 247 doi 10 2307 2297414 ISSN 0034 6527 JSTOR 2297414 Grossman Sanford J Perry Motty 1986 06 01 Sequential bargaining under asymmetric information Journal of Economic Theory 39 1 120 154 doi 10 1016 0022 0531 86 90023 2 ISSN 0022 0531 S2CID 154201801 Anbarci N 1993 02 01 Noncooperative Foundations of the Area Monotonic Solution The Quarterly Journal of Economics 108 1 245 258 doi 10 2307 2118502 ISSN 0033 5533 JSTOR 2118502 Anbarci Nejat 2006 08 01 Finite Alternating Move Arbitration Schemes and the Equal Area Solution Theory and Decision 61 1 21 50 doi 10 1007 s11238 005 4748 9 ISSN 0040 5833 S2CID 122355062 Erlich Sefi Hazon Noam Kraus Sarit 2018 05 02 Negotiation Strategies for Agents with Ordinal Preferences arXiv 1805 00913 cs GT Guth Werner Schmittberger Rolf Schwarze Bernd 1982 12 01 An experimental analysis of ultimatum bargaining Journal of Economic Behavior amp Organization 3 4 367 388 doi 10 1016 0167 2681 82 90011 7 ISSN 0167 2681 Binmore K Shaked A Sutton J 1985 Testing Noncooperative Bargaining Theory A Preliminary Study The American Economic Review 75 5 1178 1180 ISSN 0002 8282 JSTOR 1818658 Guth Werner Tietz Reinhard 1988 Tietz Reinhard Albers Wulf Selten Reinhard eds Ultimatum Bargaining for a Shrinking Cake An Experimental Analysis Bounded Rational Behavior in Experimental Games and Markets Lecture Notes in Economics and Mathematical Systems Berlin Heidelberg Springer 314 111 128 doi 10 1007 978 3 642 48356 1 9 ISBN 978 3 642 48356 1 Neelin Janet Sonnenschein Hugo Spiegel Matthew 1988 A Further Test of Noncooperative Bargaining Theory Comment The American Economic Review 78 4 824 836 ISSN 0002 8282 JSTOR 1811179 Ochs Jack Roth Alvin E 1989 An Experimental Study of Sequential Bargaining The American Economic Review 79 3 355 384 ISSN 0002 8282 JSTOR 1806850 Guth Werner Tietz Reinhard 1990 09 01 Ultimatum bargaining behavior A survey and comparison of experimental results Journal of Economic Psychology 11 3 417 449 doi 10 1016 0167 4870 90 90021 Z ISSN 0167 4870 Backus Matthew Blake Thomas Larsen Brad Tadelis Steven 2020 08 01 Sequential Bargaining in the Field Evidence from Millions of Online Bargaining Interactions The Quarterly Journal of Economics 135 3 1319 1361 doi 10 1093 qje qjaa003 ISSN 0033 5533 Game Theoretic Models of Bargaining Microeconomics Cambridge University Press Retrieved 2021 02 05 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sequential bargaining amp oldid 1180553116, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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