Werner Güth, Hannelore Weck-Hannemann, Matthias Sutter, Radosveta Ivanova-Stenzel
Investment and Bargaining in Joint Ventures: A Family Decision-Making Experiment
Veröffentlicht auf Englisch.
- Artikel PDF
- lieferbar
- 10.1628/0932456032974826
Beschreibung
Personen
Rezensionen
Beschreibung
Bilateral joint ventures, such as marriage, are economically inspired by their prospects of labor division and specialization. However, specialization makes the partner who invests more in relation-specific qualifications more exploitable (holdup problem). In a two-person experiment we study investment and bargaining behavior when specialization improves the chances to win a large prize. A low (full) joint venture relies on an intermediate (high) degree of specialization and low (high) costs in case of failure, e.g., a divorce. Results show that participants choose endogenously more efficient joint-venture types and accept minor attempts at exploitation when bargaining over the revenues of the joint venture.