Journal
JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 95, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.joep.2023.102606
Keywords
Bilateral negotiations; Multilateral negotiations; Impatience; Bargaining; Laboratory experiments
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We conducted unstructured bilateral and multilateral negotiations in a laboratory setting to examine the impact of bargainers' impatience on outcomes, as predicted by structured models. Specifically, we observed that increasing the buyer's impatience generally leads to negative outcomes for the buyer, which aligns with the predictions of standard bilateral and some multilateral models.
We conduct unstructured bilateral and multilateral negotiations in a laboratory experiment, to assess whether bargainers' impatience affects outcomes as predicted by structured models meant to represent less-structured naturally-occurring settings. For concreteness we consider a buyer who can make only one trade negotiating with one or two sellers, with impatience induced via time pressure: a bargainer receives their negotiated payoff only if agreement is reached before expiration of a randomly determined bargainer-specific time limit that is unknown to all bar-gainers. We find increasing the buyer's impatience generally harms the buyer, supporting the predictions from standard bilateral models and from some multilateral models.
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