Cover of: An Active-Contracting Perspective on Equilibrium Selection in Relational Contracts
David A. Miller, Joel Watson

An Active-Contracting Perspective on Equilibrium Selection in Relational Contracts

Section: Articles
Volume 179 (2023) / Issue 3, pp. 530-561 (32)
Published 30.11.2023
DOI 10.1628/jite-2023-0042
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  • Open Access
    CC BY 4.0
  • 10.1628/jite-2023-0042
Summary
Miller andWatson (2013) introduced contractual equilibrium for repeated games with recurrent bargaining, axiomatizing how parties in a relational contract interpret the outcome of their negotiation. We show that modeling elements the previous literature used to study negotiation - elements that would seem to capture bargaining power and impose structure on equilibrium- actually do not affect the set of equilibrium payoffs, so that predictions depend on arbitrary equilibrium selection by the analyst. In contrast, contractual equilibrium puts equilibrium selection in the parties' hands, leading to sharp predictions. In a principal-agent setting, increasing the agent's bargaining power causes the equilibrium effort to rise, and play under disagreement depends on the history of effort choices.