Abstract. I investigate the effect of competition on bidder behavior and procure-ment cost using highway auction data from Michigan. While a bidder’s distance to a project location is important in explaining participation and bid levels, there is no evidence of more aggressive bidding when competitors are located close to the project. This pattern is at odds with theoretical predictions based on first-price auctions with private costs but can be rationalized by a more general model that allows firms to have nonindependent private information and partially common costs. I show that such a model is identified from observable variation in bidder-specific cost shifters, and de-velop an estimation procedure that exploits variation in project loc...
(Preliminary and incomplete) Motivated by the empirical prevalence of simultaneous bidding across a ...
Limited competition has been a serious concern in infrastructure procurement. Importantly, however, ...
When creating a private market to provide a public good, government agencies can influence the marke...
Motivated by several interesting features of the highway mowing auction data from Texas Department o...
Collusion in auctions can take different forms, one of which is refraining from bidding. Such behavi...
In many procurement auctions bidders do not know how many rivals they face at the time that they inc...
A number of papers in the theoretical auction literature show that the release of information regard...
In this paper, the aim is to analyse the existence of collusion in asym-metric asphalt-procurement a...
In public procurement auctions, governments typically offer preferences to qualified businesses in t...
This paper explores differences in the bidding patterns of entrants and incumbents in road construct...
We provide a comparison of bidding behavior between multi-round and single-round auctions considerin...
The accurate assessment of participants’ private information may critically affect policy recommenda...
Motivated by the prevalence of simultaneous bidding across a wide range of auction markets, we devel...
In government procurement auctions of construction contracts, entrants are typically less informed a...
(Preliminary and incomplete) Motivated by the empirical prevalence of simultaneous bidding across a ...
Limited competition has been a serious concern in infrastructure procurement. Importantly, however, ...
When creating a private market to provide a public good, government agencies can influence the marke...
Motivated by several interesting features of the highway mowing auction data from Texas Department o...
Collusion in auctions can take different forms, one of which is refraining from bidding. Such behavi...
In many procurement auctions bidders do not know how many rivals they face at the time that they inc...
A number of papers in the theoretical auction literature show that the release of information regard...
In this paper, the aim is to analyse the existence of collusion in asym-metric asphalt-procurement a...
In public procurement auctions, governments typically offer preferences to qualified businesses in t...
This paper explores differences in the bidding patterns of entrants and incumbents in road construct...
We provide a comparison of bidding behavior between multi-round and single-round auctions considerin...
The accurate assessment of participants’ private information may critically affect policy recommenda...
Motivated by the prevalence of simultaneous bidding across a wide range of auction markets, we devel...
In government procurement auctions of construction contracts, entrants are typically less informed a...
(Preliminary and incomplete) Motivated by the empirical prevalence of simultaneous bidding across a ...
Limited competition has been a serious concern in infrastructure procurement. Importantly, however, ...
When creating a private market to provide a public good, government agencies can influence the marke...