Simultaneous versus sequential offers in dominant player bargaining
Abstract
We consider bargaining between a number of players that are all
essential in creating a surplus. One of the players is dominant in the
sense that it ultimately decides whether the surplus will be created.
The other players have an incentive to get a large share of the pie
for themselves, but leaving enough for the dominant firm that it finds
it profitable to create the surplus. Hence, the smaller players have
preferences over who they take their share from. When the dominant
player makes the first offer in an alternating offer framework,
we analyse whether it should conduct negotiations sequentially with
some grouping of players, or simultaneously. We demonstrate that
the dominant player will prefer simultaneous negotiation. The other
players would prefer to negotiate early with the dominant one, and
then to see remaining rivals negotiate simultaneously.
Description
This paper is part of the project "The knowledge-based society"
Publisher
Universitetet i TromsøThe University of Tromsø
Series
Working Paper Series in Economics and Management No. 01/08, January 2008Metadata
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