Sequential bargaining
Sequential bargaining is a structured form of bargaining between two participants, in which the participants take turns in making offers. Initially, person #1 has the right to make an offer to person #2. If person #2 accepts the offer, then an agreement is reached and the process ends. If person #2 rejects the offer, then the participants switch turns, and now it is the turn of person #2 to make an offer. The people keep switching turns until either an agreement is reached, or the process ends with a disagreement due to a certain end condition. Several end conditions are common, for example:
- There is a pre-specified limit on the number of turns; after that many turns, the process ends.
- There is a pre-specified limit on the negotiation time; when time runs out, the process ends.
- The number of possible offers is finite, and the protocol rules disallow to offer the same agreement twice. Hence, if the number of possible offers is finite, at some point all them are exhausted, and the negotiation ends without an agreement.
- Dividing the Dollar: two people should decide how to split a given amount of money between them. If they do not reach an agreement, they get nothing. This setting can represent a buyer and a seller bargaining on the price of an item, where the valuations of both players are known. In this case, the amount of money is the difference between the buyer's value and the seller's value.
- Buyer and Seller: a buyer and the seller bargain over the price of an item, and their valuations of the item are not known.
- A general outcome set: there is an arbitrary finite set of possible outcomes, each of which yields a different payment to each of the two players. This setting can represent, for example, two parties who have to choose an agreed arbitrator from a given set of candidates.
Game-theoretic analysis
Dividing the dollar
studied a setting in which the negotiation is on how to divide $1 between the two players. Each player in turn can offer any partition. The players bear a cost for each round of negotiation. The cost can be presented in two ways:- Additive cost: the cost of each player i is ci per round. Then, if c1 < c2, the only SPE gives the entire $1 to player 1; if c1 > c2, the only SPE gives $c2 to player 1 and $1-c2 to player 2.
- Multiplicative cost: each player has a discount factor di. Then, the only SPE gives $/ to player 1.
Buyer and seller
and Tirole study sequential bargaining between a buyer and a seller who have incomplete information, i.e., they do not know the valuation of their partner. They focus on a two-turn game. Both players prefer a trade today than the same trade tomorrow. They analyze the Perfect Bayesian equilibrium in this game, if the seller's valuation is known, then the PBE is generically unique; but if both valuations are private, then there are multiple PBE. Some surprising findings, that follow from the information transfer and the lack of commitment, are:- The buyer may do better when he is more impatient;
- Increasing the size of the "contract zone" may decrease the probability of agreement;
- Prices can increase over time;
- Increasing the number of periods can decrease efficiency.
- Players communicate their private information by revealing their willingness to delay the agreement;
- The least patient buyers accept the seller's offer immediately;
- The intermediately-patient respond with an acceptable counter-offer;
- the most patient respond with a counter-offer that they know the seller will not accept.
- The seller cannot credibly threaten to reject an offer above the discounted value of the game in which all buyers are intermediately-patient.
- If the seller gets an unacceptable offer, he updates his beliefs and the process repeats. This can go on for many rounds.
General outcome set
In a later study, Anbarci studies several schemes for two agents who have to select an arbitrator from a given set of candidates:
- In the Alternating Strike scheme, each agent in turn crosses off one candidate; the last remaining candidate is chosen. The scheme is not invariant to "bad" alternatives.
- In contrast, the Voting by Alternating Offers and Vetoes scheme is invariant to bad alternatives.
Erlich, Hazon and Kraus study the Alternating Offers protocol in several informational settings:
- With complete information, there are strategies that specify a subgame-perfect equilibrium for the agents, and can be computed in linear time. They implement a known bargaining rule.
- With partial information and no information, there are other solution concepts that are distribution-free.
Experimental analysis
Laboratory studies
The Dividing-the-Dollar game has been studied in several laboratory experiments. In general, subjects behave quite differently from the unique SPE. Subjects' behavior depends on the number of turns, their experience with the game, and their beliefs about fairness. There have been multiple experiments.Field study
A field study was done by Backus, Blake, Larsen and Tadelis. They studied back-and-forth sequential bargaining in over 25 million listings from the Best Offer platform of eBay. Their main findings are:- About 1/3 of the interactions end in immediate agreement, as predicted by complete-information models.
- Most interactions end in disagreement or delayed agreement, as predicted by incomplete-information models.
- Stronger bargaining power and better outside options improve agents' outcomes.
- A reciprocal, gradual concession behavior, and delayed disagreement.
- A preference for making and accepting offers that split the difference between the two most recent offers.