Auctions versus Negotiations
The Effects of Inefficient Renegotiation

Authors:

Herweg, Fabian (University of Bayreuth)
Schmidt, Klaus M. (University of Munich)

Abstract:

For the procurement of complex goods the early exchange of information is important to avoid costly renegotiation. If the buyer can specify the main characteristics of possible design improvements in a complete contingent contract, a scoring auction implements the efficient allocation. If this is not feasible, the buyer must choose between a price-only auction (discouraging early information exchange) and bilateral negotiations with a preselected seller (reducing competition). Bilateral negotiations are superior if potential design improvements are important, if renegotiation is particularly costly, and if the buyer’s bargaining position is strong. Moreover, negotiations provide stronger incentives for sellers to investigate design improvements.

Keywords:

Adaptation costs; auctions; behavioral contract theory; loss aversion; negotiations; procurement; renegotiation;

JEL-Classification:

D03; D82; D83; H57

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Auctions versus Negotiations
The Effects of Inefficient Renegotiation
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