Varying the number of bidders in the first-price sealed-bid auction: experimental evidence for the one-shot game

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Theory and Decision, 75, 3, (2013), pp. 421-447ISSN
Annotation
22 mei 2013
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
Financiële economie en ondernemingsfinanciering
Journal title
Theory and Decision
Volume
vol. 75
Issue
iss. 3
Languages used
English (eng)
Page start
p. 421
Page end
p. 447
Subject
Distributional Conflicts in a Globalizing World: Consequences for State-Market-Civil Society ArrangementsAbstract
The paper reports experimental data on the behavior in the first-price sealed-bid auction for a varying number of bidders when values and bids are private information. This feedback-free design is proposed for the experimental test of the one-shot game situation. We consider both within-subjects and between-subjects variations. In line with the qualitative risk neutral Nash equilibrium prediction, the data show that bids increase in the number of bidders. However, in auctions involving a small number of bidders, average bids are above, and in auctions involving a larger number of bidders, average bids are below the risk neutral equilibrium prediction. The quartile analysis reveals that bidding behavior is not constant across the full value range for a given number of bidders. On the high value quartiles, however, the average bid–value ratio is not different from the risk neutral prediction. The behavior is different when the winning bid is revealed after each repetition.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [229289]
- Electronic publications [111702]
- Nijmegen School of Management [17975]
- Open Access publications [80490]
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