Bidding in common value auctions: How the commercial construction industry corrects for the winner's curse
Experienced construction industry executives suffer from a winner's curse in laboratory common value auction markets (Dyer et al. [Dyer, D., J. H. Kagel, D. Levin. 1989. A comparison of naive and experienced bidders in common value offer auctions: Laboratory analysis. Econom. J. 99 108-115.]). This paper identifies essential differences between field environments and the economic theory underlying the laboratory markets that account for the executives' success in the field and a winner's curse in the lab. These are (1) industry-specific mechanisms which enable contractors to escape the winner's curse even when they bid too low, (2) learned, industry-specific evaluative processes which enable experienced contractors to avoid the winner's curse in the first place, and (3) important private value elements that underlie bidding. Also identified are a number of industry-specific bidding characteristics whose evolution can be explained using modern auction theory. Lessons are drawn regarding the use of experimental methods in economics.
Year of publication: |
1996
|
---|---|
Authors: | Dyer, Douglas ; Kagel, John |
Institutions: | The Field Experiments Website |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Dyer, Douglas, (1996)
-
Kagel, John, (1979)
-
Tests of 'fanning out' of indifference curves: Results from animal and human experiments
MacDonald, Don, (1990)
- More ...