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Chapter 15 Bargaining with Complete Information

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Title: Chapter 15 Bargaining with Complete Information


1
Chapter 15Bargaining with Complete Information
  • Scope and Scale of Bargaining
  • Ultimatum Game
  • Multiple rounds
  • Multilateral bargaining
  • Matching

2
Contents
  • In this chpater we
  • begin with some general remarks about bargaining
    and the importance of unions
  • turn to bargaining games where the players have
    incomplete information
  • discuss the role of signaling in such games.

3
Scope and Scale of Bargaining
  • This chapter focuses on the well known problem
    of how to split the gains from trade or, more
    generally, mutual interaction when the objectives
    of the bargaining parties diverge. In this
    chapter we avoid the complications of
    asymmetrically informed agents.
  • We begin with some general remarks about
    bargaining and the importance of unions.

4
Resolving conflict
  • Bargaining is one way of resolving a conflict
    between two or more parties, chosen when all
    parties view it more favorably relative to the
    alternatives.
  • Alternative means include
  • Capitulation
  • Predation and expropriation
  • Warfare and destruction
  • Bargaining also has these elements in it.

5
Examples of bargaining situations
  • Examples of bargaining situations include
  • Unions bargain with their employers about wages
    and working conditions.
  • Professionals negotiate their employment or work
    contracts when changing jobs.
  • Builders and their clients bargain over the
    nature and extent of the work to reach a work
    contract.
  • Pre nuptial agreements are written by partners
    betrothed to be married.
  • No fault divorce law facilitates bargaining over
    the division of assets amongst divorcing
    partners.

6
Unions
  • Unions warrant special mention in discussions of
    bargaining and industrial relations.
  • They are defined as a continuous associations of
    wage earners for the purpose of maintaining or
    improving their remuneration and the conditions
    of their working lives.
  • In the first half of the 20th century union
    membership grew from almost nothing to 35 of the
    labor force, only to decline to less that 15 at
    the turn of the millennium.

7
How their composition has changed
  • Hidden within these gross trends are three
    composition effects worth mentioning
  • Employment in the government sector increased
    from 5 in the early part of the 20th century to
    15 in the 1980s, and then stabilized. Union
    membership in this sector jumped from about 10
    to about 40 between 1960 and 1975.
  • Employment in agriculture declined from 20 to 3
    in the same period. This sector was not unionized
    at the turn of the 20th century.
  • Unionization in the nonagricultural private
    sector has reflected the aggregate trend,
    declining to about 10 of the workforce down from
    35.

8
Cross sectional characteristics
  • Within the U.S. membership is highest in the
    industrial belt connecting New York with Chicago
    though Pittsburgh and Detroit (20 30), lower
    in upper New England and the west (10 20), and
    lowest in the South and Southwest (10 or less).
  • Males are 50 more likely to be union members
    than females, mainly reflecting their
    occupational choices.
  • Union membership differs greatly across
    countries
  • Canada 35
  • France 12
  • Sweden 85
  • United Kingdom 40

9
Industrial breakdown and strikes
  • Strikes are dramatic and newsworthy, but they are
    also quite rare
  • Less than 5 of union members go on strike
    within a typical work year.
  • Less than 1 of potential working hours of union
    members are lost from strikes, before accounting
    for compensating overtime.
  • About 90 of all collective agreements are
    renewed without a strike, but the threat of a
    strike affects more than 10.

10
Three dimensions of bargaining
  • We shall focus on three dimensions of bargaining
  • How many parties are involved, and what is being
    traded or shared?
  • What are the bargaining rules and/or how do the
    parties communicate their messages to each other?
  • How much information do the bargaining parties
    have about their partners?
  • Answering these questions helps us to predict the
    outcome of the negotiations.

11
The ultimatum game
  • We now analyze the (two person) ultimatum game.
    Then we shall,extend the game to treat repeated
    offers, show what happens as we change the number
    of bargaining parties, and finally broaden the
    discussion to assignment problems where players
    match with each other.

12
Ultimatum games
  • We begin with one of the simplest bargaining
    games for 2 or more players.
  • One player is designated the proposer, the others
    are called responders.
  • The proposer makes a proposal. If enough
    responders agree to this proposal, then it is
    accepted and implemented.
  • Otherwise the proposal is rejected, and a default
    plan is implemented instead.

13
2 player ultimatum games
  • We consider the problem of splitting a dollar
    between two players, and investigate three
    versions of it
  • The proposer offers anything between 0 and 1, and
    the responder either accepts or rejects the
    offer.
  • The proposer makes an offer, and the responder
    either accepts or rejects the offer, without
    knowing exactly what the proposer receives.
  • The proposer selects an offer, and the responder
    simultaneously selects a reservation value. If
    the reservation value is less than the offer,
    then the responder receives the offer, but only
    in that case.

14
Solution
  • The game theoretic solution is the same in all
    three cases.
  • Does the experimental evidence support that
    hypothesis?
  • The solution is for the proposer to extract
    (almost) all the surplus, and for the responder
    to accept the proposal.
  • Observe the same outcome would occur if, right at
    the outset, the responder had capitulated, or if
    the proposer had expropriated the whole surplus.

15
Multiple rounds of bargaining
  • Suppose that a responder has a richer message
    space than simply accepting or rejecting the
    initial proposal.
  • After an initial proposal is made, we now assume
  • The responder may accept the proposal, or with
    probability p, make a counter offer.
  • If the initial offer is rejected, the game ends
    with probability 1 p.
  • If a counter offer is made, the original proposer
    either accepts or rejects it.
  • The game ends when an offer is accepted, but if
    both offers are rejected, no transaction takes
    place.

16
Solution to a 2 round bargaining game
  • In the final period the second player recognizes
    that the first will accept any final strictly
    positive offer, no matter how small.
  • Therefore the second player reject any offer with
    a share less than p in the total gains from
    trade.
  • The first player anticipates the response of the
    second player to his initial proposal.
  • Accordingly the first player offers the second
    player proportion p, which is accepted.

17
A finite round bargaining game
  • This game can be extended to a finite number of
    rounds, where two players alternate between
    making proposals to each other.
  • Suppose there are T rounds. If the proposal in
    round t lt T is rejected, the bargaining
    continues for another round with probability p,
    where 0 lt p lt 1.
  • In that case the player who has just rejected the
    most recent proposal makes a counter offer.
  • If T proposals are rejected, the bargaining ends.
  • If no agreement is reached, both players receive
    nothing. If an agreement is reached, the payoffs
    reflect the terms of the agreement.

18
Sub-game perfection
  • If the game reaches round T - K without reaching
    an agreement, the player proposing at that time
    will treat the last K rounds as a K round game in
    which he leads off with the first proposal.
  • Therefore the amount a player would initially
    offer the other in a K round game, is identical
    to the amount he would offer if there are K
    rounds to go in T gt K round game and it was his
    turn.

19
Solution to finite round bargaining game
  • One can show using the principle of mathematical
    induction that the value of making the first
    offer in a T round alternating offer bargaining
    is
  • vT 1 p p2 . . . pT
  • (1 pT )/(1 p)
  • where T is an odd number.
  • Observe that as T diverges, vT converges to
  • vT 1 /(1 p)

20
Infinite horizon
  • We now directly investigate the solution of the
    infinite horizon alternating offer bargaining
    game.
  • Let v denote the value of the game to the
    proposer in an infinite horizon game.
  • Then the value of the game to the responder is at
    least pv, since he will be the proposer next
    period if he rejects the current offer, and there
    is another offer round.
  • The proposer can therefore attain a payoff of
  • v 1 pv gt v 1/(1p)
  • which is the limit of the finite horizon game
    payoff.

21
Alternatives to taking turns
  • Bargaining parties do not always take turns. We
    now explore two alternatives
  • Only one player is empowered to make offers, and
    the other can simply respond by accepting or
    rejecting it.
  • Each period in a finite round game one party is
    selected at random to make an offer.

22
When only one player makes offers
  • In this case, the proposer makes an offer in the
    second round, if his first round offer is
    rejected.
  • The solution reverts to the canonical one period
    solution.
  • This simply demonstrates that the rules about who
    can make an offer affects the outcome a lot.

23
When the order is random
  • Suppose there is an equal chance of being the
    proposer in each period.
  • We first consider a 2 round game, and then an
    infinite horizon game.
  • As before p denote the probability of continuing
    negotiations if no agreement is reach at the end
    of the first round.

24
Solution to 2 round random offer game
  • If the first round proposal is rejected, then the
    expected payoff to both parties is p/2.
  • The first round proposer can therefore attain a
    payoff of
  • v 1 p/2

25
Solution to infinite horizonrandom offer game
  • If the first round proposal is rejected, then the
    expected payoff to both parties is pv/2.
  • The first round proposer can therefore attain a
    payoff of
  • v 1 pv/2 gt 2v 2 pv gt v 2/(2 p)
  • Note that this is identical to the infinitely
    repeated game for half the continuation
    probability.
  • These examples together demonstrate that the
    number of offers is not the only determinant of
    the bargaining outcome.

26
Multiplayer ultimatum games
  • We now increase the number of players to N gt 2.
  • Each player is initially allocated a random
    endowment, which everyone observes.
  • The proposer proposes a system of taxes and
    subsidies to everyone.
  • If at least J lt N 1 of the responders accept
    the proposal, then the tax subsidy system is put
    in place.
  • Otherwise the resources are not reallocated, and
    the players consume their initial endowments.

27
Solution to multiplayer ultimatum game
  • Rank the endowments from the poorest responder to
    the richest one.
  • Let wn denote the endowment of the nth poorest
    responder.
  • The proposer offers the J poorest responders
    their initial endowment (or very little more) and
    then expropriate the entire wealth of the N J
    remaining responders.
  • In equilibrium the J poorest responders accept
    the proposal, the remaining responders reject the
    proposal, and it is implemented.

28
Another multiplayer ultimatum game
  • Now suppose there are 2 proposers and one
    responder.
  • The proposers make simultaneous offers to the
    responder.
  • Then the responder accepts at most one proposal.
  • If a proposal is rejected, the proposer receives
    nothing.
  • If a proposal is accepted, the proposer and the
    responder receive the allocation specified in the
    terms of the proposal.
  • If both proposals are rejected, nobody receives
    anything.

29
The solution to this game
  • If a proposer makes an offer that does not give
    the entire surplus to the responder, then the
    other proposer could make a slightly more
    attractive offer.
  • Therefore the solution to this bargaining game is
    for both proposers to offer the entire gains from
    trade to the responder, and for the responder to
    pick either one.

30
Heterogeneous valuations
  • As before, there are 2 proposers and one
    responder, the proposers make simultaneous offers
    to the responder, the responder accepts at most
    one proposal.
  • Also as before if a proposal is rejected, the
    proposer receives nothing. If a proposal is
    accepted, the proposer and the responder receive
    the allocation specified in the terms of the
    proposal. If both proposals are rejected, nobody
    receives anything.
  • But let us now suppose that the proposers have
    different valuations for the item, say v1 and v2
    respectively, where v1 lt v2.

31
Solving heterogeneous valuations game
  • It is not a best response of either proposer to
    offer less than the other proposer if the other
    proposer is offering less than both valuations.
  • Furthermore offering more than your valuation is
    weakly dominated by bidding less than your
    valuation. Consequently the first proposer offers
    v1 or less.
  • Therefore the solution of this game is for the
    second proposer to offer (marginally more than)
    v1 and for the responder to always accept the
    offer of the second proposer.

32
Matching
  • A different type of game where players assign
    themselves to each other and work out the terms
    of trade
  • Two issues
  • assignment
  • terms of trade

33
Multilateral exchange
  • In all our previous examples, there is at most
    one transaction.
  • In such games if more than two players were
    involved, they competed with each other for the
    right to be one of the trading partners.
  • We now suppose there are opportunities on both
    sides of the trading mechanism to form a
    partnership with one of a number of different
    players.
  • If the prospective partners were identical,
    then perhaps a market would form. (But thats
    45-975!)

34
Examples of assignment problems
  • We now explore an intermediate case. No two
    prospective bargaining partners are alike, but
    matching any two partners from either side of the
    market might be more productive than not matching
    them at all.
  • For example
  • How are a pool of MBA graduates assigned to
    companies as employees?
  • Who gets tenure at at what university?
  • How are partners matched up across different law
    firms?
  • How are partners paired for marriage and
    parenting?

35
A multilateral bargaining game
  • We consider a bargaining game where a fraction
    of the players, called publishers, offers
    royalties to another set of players, called
    authors, to publish their manuscripts.
  • Each author has only one manuscript, so can can
    accept at most one offer.
  • Each publisher can only handle one manuscript,
    but can make multiple offers. If more than one
    offer is accepted, the publisher may select any
    one of the accepted offers

36
Valuing job matches
  • Publishers are not a perfect substitutes.
    Authors are not identical either.
  • Each publisher and each author is assigned a
    quality index, denoted respectively by pi and aj
    for the ith publisher and jth author.
  • In this lecture we suppose the value of forming
    a match between the ith publisher and jth author,
    denoted vij is the product of the two index
    values of publisher and the author. That is vij
    pi aj

37
The solution
  • One can show that the best publishers match up
    with the best authors. This is called positive
    sorting.
  • It arises because the quality of manuscripts and
    the reputation of publishers are production
    compliments.
  • The royalty rate to authors increases with their
    index. Likewise the net profits to publishers is
    increasing in their index.

38
Bargaining with full information
  • Two striking features characterize all the
    solutions of the bargaining games that we have
    played so far
  • An agreement is always reached.
  • Negotiations end after one round.
  • This occurs because nothing is learned from
    continuing negotiations, yet a cost is sustained
    because the opportunity to reach an agreement is
    put at risk from delaying it.
  • Next chapter we explore the implications of
    relaxing these two assumptions.
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