Publication | Closed Access
The Origin of the Winner's Curse: A Laboratory Study
172
Citations
32
References
2009
Year
Bayesian Decision TheoryEvolutionary Game TheoryBehavioral Decision MakingGame TheoryLaboratory StudyBehavioral Game TheoryPersistent DeviationManagementExperimental EconomicsBayesian UpdatingDecision TheoryMechanism DesignIntellectual HistoryEconomicsGamesImperfect Information GameBehavioral EconomicsHumanitiesRepeated GameBusinessGamblingGame-theoretic ProbabilityDecision ScienceAlgorithmic Game TheoryContingent Thinking
The Winner's Curse (WC) is a robust and persistent deviation from theoretical predictions established in experimental economics and claimed to exist in field environments. Recent attempts to reconcile such deviation include “cursed equilibrium” and level-k reasoning. We design and implement a simplified version of the Acquiring-a-Company game that transformed the game to an individual-choice problem that still retains the adverse-selection problem. We further simplified the problem so that simple ordinal reasoning could replace both Bayesian updating and contingent thinking. Our results suggest that the WC reflects bounded rationality in that people have difficulties performing contingent reasoning on future events. (JEL D81, D82)
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