Auctioning the right to play ultimatum games and the impact on equilibrium selection

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Abstract

We auction scarce rights to play the Proposer and Responder positions in ultimatum games. As a control treatment, we randomly allocate these rights and charge exogenous participation fees. These participation fee sequences match the auction price sequence from a session of the original treatment. With endogenous selection via auctions, we find that play converges to a session-specific Nash equilibrium, and auction prices emerge supporting this equilibrium by the principle of forward induction. With random assignment, we find play also converges to a session-specific Nash equilibrium as predicted by the principle of loss avoidance. While Nash equilibria with low offers are observed, the subgame perfect Nash equilibrium never is. © 2013 by the author; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

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Shachat, J., & Swarthout, J. T. (2013). Auctioning the right to play ultimatum games and the impact on equilibrium selection. Games, 4(4), 738–753. https://doi.org/10.3390/g4040738

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