The relationship between wealth and power has long been debated. Nevertheless, this relationship has been rarely studied in a strategic game. In this paper, we study wealth effects in a strategic contest game. Two opposing effects arise: wealth reduces the marginal cost of effort but it also reduces the marginal benefit of winning the contest. We consider three types of contests which vary depending on whether rents and efforts are commensurable with wealth. Our theoretical analysis shows that the effects of wealth are strongly "contestdependent". It thus does not support general claims that the rich lobby more or that low economic growth and wealth inequality spur conflicts
Economic games offer an analytic tool to examine strategic decision-making in social interactions. H...
We investigate how individuals react to different types of asymmetries in experimental two-player Tu...
In this paper we study a two stage contest where the strength of players in the second stage depends...
The relationship between wealth and power has long been debated. Nevertheless, this relationship has...
The relationship between wealth and power has long been debated. Nevertheless, this relationship has...
The relationship between wealth and power has long been debated. Nevertheless, this relationship has...
The relationship between wealth and power has long been debated. Nevertheless, this relationship has...
Two wealth effects typically arise in any contest: i) wealth decreases the marginal cost of effort,...
The relationship between wealth and power has long been debated. Nevertheless, this relationship has...
The relationship between wealth and power has long been debated. Nevertheless, this relationship has...
In this paper, we analyse if individual inequality aversion measured with simple experimental games ...
Attempts to influence decision making can take many forms: electoral campaigns, advertising, voting,...
In this paper we study a two stage contest where the strength of players in the second stage depends...
In this paper we study a two stage contest where the strength of players in the second stage depends...
We investigate how individuals react to different types of asymmetries in experimental two-player Tu...
Economic games offer an analytic tool to examine strategic decision-making in social interactions. H...
We investigate how individuals react to different types of asymmetries in experimental two-player Tu...
In this paper we study a two stage contest where the strength of players in the second stage depends...
The relationship between wealth and power has long been debated. Nevertheless, this relationship has...
The relationship between wealth and power has long been debated. Nevertheless, this relationship has...
The relationship between wealth and power has long been debated. Nevertheless, this relationship has...
The relationship between wealth and power has long been debated. Nevertheless, this relationship has...
Two wealth effects typically arise in any contest: i) wealth decreases the marginal cost of effort,...
The relationship between wealth and power has long been debated. Nevertheless, this relationship has...
The relationship between wealth and power has long been debated. Nevertheless, this relationship has...
In this paper, we analyse if individual inequality aversion measured with simple experimental games ...
Attempts to influence decision making can take many forms: electoral campaigns, advertising, voting,...
In this paper we study a two stage contest where the strength of players in the second stage depends...
In this paper we study a two stage contest where the strength of players in the second stage depends...
We investigate how individuals react to different types of asymmetries in experimental two-player Tu...
Economic games offer an analytic tool to examine strategic decision-making in social interactions. H...
We investigate how individuals react to different types of asymmetries in experimental two-player Tu...
In this paper we study a two stage contest where the strength of players in the second stage depends...