We show how symmetric equilibria emerge in general two-player contests in which skill and effort are combined to produce output according to a general production technology and players have skills drawn from different distributions. The model includes the Tullock (1980) and Lazear and Rosen (1981) models as special cases. Our paper provides intuition regarding how the contest components interact to determine the incentive to exert effort and sheds new light on classic comparative statics results. In particular, we show that more heterogeneity can increase equilibrium effort.An earlier working paper version of this paper was circulated under the title “A General Framework for Studying Contests”.</p
We study tournaments with many ex-ante asymmetric contestants, whose valuations for the prize are in...
I examine players' equilibrium effort levels in two-player asymmetric contests with ratio-form conte...
We consider contests with many, possibly heterogeneous, players and prizes, and show that the equili...
We show how symmetric equilibria emerge in general two-player contests in which skill and effort are...
We show how symmetric equilibria emerge in general two-player contests in which skill and effort are...
We show how symmetric equilibria emerge in general two-player contests in which skill and effort are...
We show how symmetric equilibria emerge in general two-player contests in which skill and effort are...
We show how symmetric equilibria emerge in general two-player contests in which skill and effort are...
We show how symmetric equilibria emerge in general two-player contests in which skill and effort are...
We show how symmetric equilibria emerge in general two-player contests in which skill and effort are...
We show how symmetric equilibria emerge in general two-player contests in which skill and effort ar...
We develop a general framework for studying contests, including the well-known models of Tullock (19...
We develop a general framework to study contests, containing the well-known models of Tullock (1980)...
We develop a general framework to study contests, containing the well-known models of Tullock (1980)...
We study tournaments with many ex-ante asymmetric contestants, whose valuations for the prize are in...
We study tournaments with many ex-ante asymmetric contestants, whose valuations for the prize are in...
I examine players' equilibrium effort levels in two-player asymmetric contests with ratio-form conte...
We consider contests with many, possibly heterogeneous, players and prizes, and show that the equili...
We show how symmetric equilibria emerge in general two-player contests in which skill and effort are...
We show how symmetric equilibria emerge in general two-player contests in which skill and effort are...
We show how symmetric equilibria emerge in general two-player contests in which skill and effort are...
We show how symmetric equilibria emerge in general two-player contests in which skill and effort are...
We show how symmetric equilibria emerge in general two-player contests in which skill and effort are...
We show how symmetric equilibria emerge in general two-player contests in which skill and effort are...
We show how symmetric equilibria emerge in general two-player contests in which skill and effort are...
We show how symmetric equilibria emerge in general two-player contests in which skill and effort ar...
We develop a general framework for studying contests, including the well-known models of Tullock (19...
We develop a general framework to study contests, containing the well-known models of Tullock (1980)...
We develop a general framework to study contests, containing the well-known models of Tullock (1980)...
We study tournaments with many ex-ante asymmetric contestants, whose valuations for the prize are in...
We study tournaments with many ex-ante asymmetric contestants, whose valuations for the prize are in...
I examine players' equilibrium effort levels in two-player asymmetric contests with ratio-form conte...
We consider contests with many, possibly heterogeneous, players and prizes, and show that the equili...