Investment and endogenous efficiency in a contest
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/36072Date
2025-01-01Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Contests are ubiquitous but do not happen in a vacuum. Rivals can prepare themselves for the contest to improve their ultimate chance of victory. Two contestants with different prize values play an all-pay auction and can invest to improve the efficiency of their own effort in the contest. We show that at most one player will invest, and that two asymmetric pure-strategy equilibria exist depending upon the identity of the investor. If the high-value player invests, then investment reinforces the initial asymmetry; investment by the low-value player turns the tables on the initially advantaged rival. The investment opportunity moves competition away from the contest, resulting in less expected contest effort than would occur without investment.
Publisher
ElsevierCitation
Clark, Kundu, Nilssen. Investment and endogenous efficiency in a contest. Economics Letters. 2025Metadata
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