Bidding in common value auctions: How the commercial construction industry corrects for the winner's curse

Bidding in common value auctions: How the commercial construction industry corrects for the winner's curse

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Article ID: iaor1998512
Country: United States
Volume: 42
Issue: 10
Start Page Number: 1463
End Page Number: 1475
Publication Date: Oct 1996
Journal: Management Science
Authors: ,
Keywords: construction & architecture
Abstract:

Experienced construction industry executives suffer from a winner's curse in laboratory common value auction markets. This paper identifies essential differences between field environments and the economic theory underlying the laboratory markets that account for the executives' success in the field and a winner's curse in the lab. These are (1) industry-specific mechanisms which enable contractors to escape the winner's curse even when they bid too low, (2) learned, industry-specific evaluative processes which enable experienced contractors to avoid the winner's curse in the first place, and (3) important private value elements that underlie bidding. Also identified are a number of industry-specific bidding characteristics whose evolution can be explained using modern auction theory. Lessons are drawn regarding the use of experimental methods in economics.

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