This paper characterizes the conditions under which holdout (i.e. bargaining inefficiency) may, or may not be significant in a two-sided, one-buyer-many-seller model with complementarity. We address this problem in a very general setup with a bargaining protocol that is symmetric and allows for both publicly observable, as well as secret offers, and a technology that allows for variable degrees of complementarity. The central insight is that the transparency of the bargaining protocol, formalized by whether offers are publicly observable or secret, as well as the extent of complementarity, play a critical role in generating efficiency. Even with perfect complementarity, holdout seems to be largely resolved whenever the bargaining protoco...
A central question in economics is understanding the difficulties that parties have in reaching mutu...
We study the role that price transparency plays in determining the efficiency and surplus division i...
We describe a simple 2-stage mechanism that induces two bargainers to be truthful in reporting their...
This paper characterizes the conditions under which holdout (i.e. bargaining inefficiency) may, or ...
This article characterizes the conditions under which holdout (i.e. bargaining inefficiency) may, or...
This paper studies a non-cooperative bargaining problem with one buyer and many sellers, focussing o...
The paper is a comment on "Transparency, Complementarity and Holdout" by Roy Chowdhury and Sengupta...
We model a buyer who wishes to combine objects owned by two separate sellers in order to realize hig...
We model a buyer who wishes to combine objects owned by two separate sellers in order to realize hig...
We study a model of multilateral bargaining in which a buyer attempts to assemble objects owned by m...
In the hold-up problem incomplete contracts cause the proceeds of relation specific investments to b...
Collusive equilibria exist in open ascending auctions with multiple objects, if the number of bidder...
The acquisition of information prior to sale gives rise to a hold-up situation quite naturally. Yet,...
This paper studies bargaining with noncommon priors where the buyer projects and exaggerates the pro...
A central question in economics is understanding the difficulties that parties have in reaching mutu...
We study the role that price transparency plays in determining the efficiency and surplus division i...
We describe a simple 2-stage mechanism that induces two bargainers to be truthful in reporting their...
This paper characterizes the conditions under which holdout (i.e. bargaining inefficiency) may, or ...
This article characterizes the conditions under which holdout (i.e. bargaining inefficiency) may, or...
This paper studies a non-cooperative bargaining problem with one buyer and many sellers, focussing o...
The paper is a comment on "Transparency, Complementarity and Holdout" by Roy Chowdhury and Sengupta...
We model a buyer who wishes to combine objects owned by two separate sellers in order to realize hig...
We model a buyer who wishes to combine objects owned by two separate sellers in order to realize hig...
We study a model of multilateral bargaining in which a buyer attempts to assemble objects owned by m...
In the hold-up problem incomplete contracts cause the proceeds of relation specific investments to b...
Collusive equilibria exist in open ascending auctions with multiple objects, if the number of bidder...
The acquisition of information prior to sale gives rise to a hold-up situation quite naturally. Yet,...
This paper studies bargaining with noncommon priors where the buyer projects and exaggerates the pro...
A central question in economics is understanding the difficulties that parties have in reaching mutu...
We study the role that price transparency plays in determining the efficiency and surplus division i...
We describe a simple 2-stage mechanism that induces two bargainers to be truthful in reporting their...