Endowment Effects in Proposal Rights Contests

IF 0.2 4区 经济学 Q4 ECONOMICS
Youjin Hahn, Chulyoung Kim, Sang‐Hyun Kim
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

When parties negotiate over surplus, incumbents, or agenda-setters, tend to spend more resources than challengers to keep their power in making a proposal. This is often attributed to the fact that incumbents usually have better access to resources. We experimentally investigate whether incumbents spend more resources even when they have no advantage. Specifically, we consider a twostage game where in the first stage, players compete to be recognized as a proposer, and in the second stage, they play an ultimatum bargaining game. Our treatment concerns whether one of the subjects is endowed with proposal right (without any material advantage) in the beginning of the game. We find that subjects who were framed to be incumbents spent significantly more resources to keep the proposal right than others. This suggests that even without any resource advantage, the parties who have the power would incur higher costs to keep it, and thus, the allocation of power is likely to persist. Our finding is new in the sense that the endowment effect does not concern “property right†as in previous studies but “proposal right.â€
求婚权争夺中的赠与效应
当政党就盈余进行谈判时,现任者或议程制定者往往比挑战者花费更多的资源来保持他们在提案中的权力。这通常归因于现任者通常能够更好地获得资源。我们通过实验研究在职者是否在没有优势的情况下花费更多的资源。具体来说,我们考虑一个两阶段的游戏,在第一阶段,玩家竞争被认可为提议者,在第二阶段,他们玩最后通牒讨价还价游戏。我们的处理涉及在游戏开始时,其中一名受试者是否被赋予了求婚权(没有任何物质优势)。我们发现,与其他人相比,被认为是现任者的受试者花费了更多的资源来保持提案的正确性。这表明,即使没有任何资源优势,拥有权力的各方也会承担更高的成本来维持权力,因此,权力分配可能会持续下去。我们的发现是新的,因为捐赠效应与先前研究中的“财产权”无关,而是与“提案权”有关
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
8
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