We set up a laboratory experiment to investigate systematically how varying the magnitude of outside options-the payoffs that materialize in case of a bargaining breakdown-of proposers and responders influences players' demands and game outcomes (rejection rates, payoffs, efficiency) in ultimatum bargaining. We find that proposers as well as responders gradually increase their demands when their respective outside option increases. Rejections become more likely when the asymmetry in the players' outside options is large. Generally, the predominance of the equal split decreases with increasing outside options. From a theoretical benchmark perspective we find a low predictive power of equilibria based on self-regarding preferences or inequity...
This paper shows that identical offers in an ultimatum game generate systematically different reject...
There is strong evidence that in bargaining situations with asymmetric outside options people exhibi...
In the economic modeling of bargaining, outside options have often been naively treated by taking th...
Experiments with the ultimatum game -- where one party can make a take-it-or-leave-it offer to a sec...
We conducted ultimatum games in which a proposer offers a division of $10 to a respondent, who accep...
Behavior in one-shot bargaining games, like the Ultimatum Game (UG), has been interpreted as an expr...
There is strong evidence that in bargaining situations with asymmetric outside op-tions people exhib...
We conducted ultimatum games in which a proposer offers a division of $10 to a respondent, who accep...
Assuming inequality averse subjects as modeled by Fehr and Schmidt (1999) or in the ERC model by Bol...
There is strong evidence that in bargaining situations with asymmetric outside options people exhibi...
We investigated if responders accept a 50-50 split in a modified version of the ultimatum game, in w...
This paper studies the extent to which offers and demands in ultimatum games are consistent with equ...
In social dilemmas, choices may depend on belief-dependent motivations enhancing the credibility of ...
In social dilemmas, choices may depend on belief-dependent motivations enhancing the credibility of ...
In social dilemmas, choices may depend on belief-dependent motivations enhancing the credibility of ...
This paper shows that identical offers in an ultimatum game generate systematically different reject...
There is strong evidence that in bargaining situations with asymmetric outside options people exhibi...
In the economic modeling of bargaining, outside options have often been naively treated by taking th...
Experiments with the ultimatum game -- where one party can make a take-it-or-leave-it offer to a sec...
We conducted ultimatum games in which a proposer offers a division of $10 to a respondent, who accep...
Behavior in one-shot bargaining games, like the Ultimatum Game (UG), has been interpreted as an expr...
There is strong evidence that in bargaining situations with asymmetric outside op-tions people exhib...
We conducted ultimatum games in which a proposer offers a division of $10 to a respondent, who accep...
Assuming inequality averse subjects as modeled by Fehr and Schmidt (1999) or in the ERC model by Bol...
There is strong evidence that in bargaining situations with asymmetric outside options people exhibi...
We investigated if responders accept a 50-50 split in a modified version of the ultimatum game, in w...
This paper studies the extent to which offers and demands in ultimatum games are consistent with equ...
In social dilemmas, choices may depend on belief-dependent motivations enhancing the credibility of ...
In social dilemmas, choices may depend on belief-dependent motivations enhancing the credibility of ...
In social dilemmas, choices may depend on belief-dependent motivations enhancing the credibility of ...
This paper shows that identical offers in an ultimatum game generate systematically different reject...
There is strong evidence that in bargaining situations with asymmetric outside options people exhibi...
In the economic modeling of bargaining, outside options have often been naively treated by taking th...