This paper investigates the conventional wisdom that market competition for the rights to perform decision-making tasks improves aggregate performances in all relevant tasks by diverting decision rights to individuals who are better able to utilise them. To do so, I use an experiment that embeds asset markets into the Hat Puzzle Problem game. I show that players’ performances in the game will depend on their ability to employ sophisticated counterfactual reasoning and provide a behavioural framework that illustrates how market competition can improve aggregate performances in the game. Contradictory to the conventional wisdom, I find that market competition exacerbates aggregate performances and diverts decision rights to players who are le...
In this paper we report the results from a series of experiments on Cournot (homogeneous and differe...
© 2018 Elsevier B.V. The paper studies an oligopoly game, where firms can choose between price-takin...
In this paper we provide an experimental test of a dynamic Bertrand duopolistic model, where firms m...
This paper investigates the conventional wisdom that market competition for the rights to perform de...
This paper investigates the conventional wisdom that markets should allocate the rights for performi...
This paper investigates the conventional wisdom that markets would naturally allocate the rights for...
We use laboratory experiments to study the causal effects of favorable and unfavorable competitive m...
In economics, players are assumed to be rational: they exhibit self interested behavior and play equ...
peer reviewedThere is robust evidence in the experimental economics literature showing that monopoly...
In this paper we apply a learning model from machine learning, to a human trading crowd to understan...
We study a game in which two firms compete in quality to serve a market consisting of consumers with...
Whereas orthodox game theory relies on the unrealistic assumption of (commonly known) perfect ration...
This article asks whether competition can ameliorate the consequences of cognitive error. Consumers ...
International audienceMarketers often commit to matching competitors' prices by offering price-match...
We study equilibrium selection in A. Gerber, T. Hens and B. Vogt’s experiment (in Rational Investor ...
In this paper we report the results from a series of experiments on Cournot (homogeneous and differe...
© 2018 Elsevier B.V. The paper studies an oligopoly game, where firms can choose between price-takin...
In this paper we provide an experimental test of a dynamic Bertrand duopolistic model, where firms m...
This paper investigates the conventional wisdom that market competition for the rights to perform de...
This paper investigates the conventional wisdom that markets should allocate the rights for performi...
This paper investigates the conventional wisdom that markets would naturally allocate the rights for...
We use laboratory experiments to study the causal effects of favorable and unfavorable competitive m...
In economics, players are assumed to be rational: they exhibit self interested behavior and play equ...
peer reviewedThere is robust evidence in the experimental economics literature showing that monopoly...
In this paper we apply a learning model from machine learning, to a human trading crowd to understan...
We study a game in which two firms compete in quality to serve a market consisting of consumers with...
Whereas orthodox game theory relies on the unrealistic assumption of (commonly known) perfect ration...
This article asks whether competition can ameliorate the consequences of cognitive error. Consumers ...
International audienceMarketers often commit to matching competitors' prices by offering price-match...
We study equilibrium selection in A. Gerber, T. Hens and B. Vogt’s experiment (in Rational Investor ...
In this paper we report the results from a series of experiments on Cournot (homogeneous and differe...
© 2018 Elsevier B.V. The paper studies an oligopoly game, where firms can choose between price-takin...
In this paper we provide an experimental test of a dynamic Bertrand duopolistic model, where firms m...