Sequential Bargaining with Public Intervention: The Optimal Subsidy Path
Forfatter
Aanesen, MargretheSammendrag
Models of sequential bargaining under asymmetric information often exhibit
equilibria which are characterised by the fact that agreement is reached only with
a delay and that the final (period) solution is ex ante inefficient. The latter means
that agreement is not reached though it is efficient (aggregate pay off exceeds
aggregate costs). In this paper we analyse how intervention by a third agent in a
sequential bargaining process, modelled as a durable goods monopoly, affects the
(high path) equilibrium outcome. The effects of intervention crucially depend on
how intervention is formulated. When the intervening agent and the seller
decides the price and the subsidy (the intervening agent’s contribution) is decided
in a Stackelberg game with the intervening agent as the leader the negotiations
are always speeded up and equilibrium inefficiency reduced. When the seller acts
as a Stackelberg leader the negotiations are only conditionally speeded up and the
equilibrium inefficiency only conditionally reduced. For the same values on the
reservation prices and discount factor intervention is more likely to take place
when the seller acts as a Stackelberg leader. Also, both the seller’s price and the
subsidy are higher when the seller acts as a Stackelberg leader compared to if the
intervening agent acts as a Stackelberg leader.
Forlag
Universitetet i TromsøUniversity of Tromsø
Serie
Working Paper Series in Economics and Management, No. 05/08, October 2008Metadata
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