It is well known that a pure-strategy Nash equilibrium does not exist for a two-player rent-seeking contest when the contest success function parameter is greater than two. We analyze the contest using the concept of equilibrium in secure strategies, which is a generalization of the Nash equilibrium. It is defined by two conditions: (i) no player can make a profitable deviation that decreases the payoff of another player and (ii), for any profitable deviation there is a subsequent deviation by another player, that is profitable for the second deviator and worse than the status quo for the first deviator. We show that such equilibrium always exists in the Tullock contest. Moreover, when the success function parameter is greater than two, thi...
We investigate the pure-strategy Nash equilibria of asymmetric, winner-take-all, imperfectly discrim...
We study Tullock’s (1980) n-player contest when each player has an independent prob-ability 0 < p...
A non-cooperative solution, the Equilibrium in Secure Strategies (EinSS), is defined as an extension...
In imperfectly discriminating contests with symmetric valuations, equilibrium payoffs are positive s...
We consider a two-player Tullock rent-seeking contest with uncertain discriminatory power in the con...
In this paper, we present a contest success function (CSF), which is homogeneous of degree zero and ...
textabstractIn Tullock's rent-seeking model, the probability a player wins the game depends on expen...
Under standard assumptions about players’ cost functions, we show that a Tullock contest with asymme...
In imperfectly discriminating contests with symmetric valuations, equilibrium payoffs are positive s...
We consider a rent-seeking contest of the kind introduced by Tullock (1980) in which two players com...
We analyze existence, uniqueness and properties of equilibria in incompletely discriminating Tullock...
We show that under standard assumptions a Tullock contest with asymmetric information has a pure str...
We consider a rent-seeking contest of the kind introduced by Tullock (1980) in which two players com...
We show that under standard assumptions a Tullock contest with asymmetric information has a pure st...
There can be three types of heterogeneity among players in a rent-seeking contest. First, effectiven...
We investigate the pure-strategy Nash equilibria of asymmetric, winner-take-all, imperfectly discrim...
We study Tullock’s (1980) n-player contest when each player has an independent prob-ability 0 < p...
A non-cooperative solution, the Equilibrium in Secure Strategies (EinSS), is defined as an extension...
In imperfectly discriminating contests with symmetric valuations, equilibrium payoffs are positive s...
We consider a two-player Tullock rent-seeking contest with uncertain discriminatory power in the con...
In this paper, we present a contest success function (CSF), which is homogeneous of degree zero and ...
textabstractIn Tullock's rent-seeking model, the probability a player wins the game depends on expen...
Under standard assumptions about players’ cost functions, we show that a Tullock contest with asymme...
In imperfectly discriminating contests with symmetric valuations, equilibrium payoffs are positive s...
We consider a rent-seeking contest of the kind introduced by Tullock (1980) in which two players com...
We analyze existence, uniqueness and properties of equilibria in incompletely discriminating Tullock...
We show that under standard assumptions a Tullock contest with asymmetric information has a pure str...
We consider a rent-seeking contest of the kind introduced by Tullock (1980) in which two players com...
We show that under standard assumptions a Tullock contest with asymmetric information has a pure st...
There can be three types of heterogeneity among players in a rent-seeking contest. First, effectiven...
We investigate the pure-strategy Nash equilibria of asymmetric, winner-take-all, imperfectly discrim...
We study Tullock’s (1980) n-player contest when each player has an independent prob-ability 0 < p...
A non-cooperative solution, the Equilibrium in Secure Strategies (EinSS), is defined as an extension...