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Published in: Theory and Decision 3-4/2018

26-03-2018

Asymmetric endogenous prize contests

Authors: Damian S. Damianov, Shane Sanders, Anil Yildizparlak

Published in: Theory and Decision | Issue 3-4/2018

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Abstract

We consider a two-player contest in which one contestant has a headstart advantage, but both can exert further effort. We allow the prize to depend on total performance in the contest and consider the respective cases in which efforts are productive and destructive of prize value. When the contest success function takes a logit form, and marginal cost is increasing in effort, we show that a Nash equilibrium exists and is unique both in productive and destructive endogenous prize contests. In equilibrium, the underdog expends more resources to win the prize, but still his probability of winning remains below that of the favorite. In a productive contest, the underdog behaves more aggressively and wins the prize more often in comparison to a fixed-value contest. Thus, the degree of competitive balance—defined as the level of uncertainty of the outcome—depends upon the (fixed or endogenous) prize nature of the contest.

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Appendix
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Footnotes
1
Broader examples of productive contests from the legal profession, financial markets, industrial organization, and the entertainment industry are presented in Chung (1996). A more recent application of an endogenous value contest to advertising is developed in Ridlon (2016).
 
2
For a model allowing for multiple prizes and asymmetric payoffs, see, e.g., Siegel (2014).
 
3
See the proof of Proposition 1 in the Appendix.
 
4
In a similar headstart model with a fixed prize and constant marginal cost, Froeb and Kobayashi (1996) show that the headstart is completely offset resulting in equal performance by the players in equilibrium. Such a result would obtain also in our endogenous prize model under the assumption of constant marginal cost.
 
5
As indicated earlier, corner equilibria represent a degenerate case applicable for destructive contests only. The parameter values leading to this case are outlined in the proof of Proposition 1.
 
6
Our proposition also extends to the corner equilibria in destructive contests except for \(e_1^*=e_2^*=0\), which by definition is socially optimal if effort is destructive. See the proof of Proposition 1.
 
7
We would like to thank an anonymous referee for raising this question.
 
8
As player 1 is the more likely winner in our model (see Proposition 1), the competitive balance is non-negative.
 
9
Similar structure has been analyzed by Cohen et al. (2008) who look at a contest design problem in which the designer’s objective is to maximize either the highest effort or total effort of contestants.
 
10
Our results holds for any \( c\left( e_i \right) \) such that \( c'''\left( e_i\right) = 0 \).
 
11
The approach of using the winning probabilities to provide equilibrium existence and uniqueness results for fixed prize contests was developed by Cornes and Hartley (2005).
 
12
Note that in a model with a constant marginal cost, the right hand side of Eq. (11) would be zero, from which would follow that the left hand side must also be zero, i.e., \( x_1^*=x_2^* \).
 
13
Note that \(-2a{V'(2a)}/{V(2a)}>1\) does not necessarily hold as for any destructive contest \(V(0)>0\) is a necessary condition.
 
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Metadata
Title
Asymmetric endogenous prize contests
Authors
Damian S. Damianov
Shane Sanders
Anil Yildizparlak
Publication date
26-03-2018
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Theory and Decision / Issue 3-4/2018
Print ISSN: 0040-5833
Electronic ISSN: 1573-7187
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11238-018-9661-0

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