Microeconomics, Student Value Edition (2nd Edition)
2nd Edition
ISBN: 9780134461786
Author: Daron Acemoglu, David Laibson, John List
Publisher: PEARSON
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Question
Chapter 17, Problem 9Q
To determine
Ways in which English auction is similar to Dutch auction.
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Consider an English auction with 3 bidders having the valuations v1=12, v2=7, and v3=9. What will be the revenue to the seller?
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Consider an antique auction where bidders have independent private values. There are two bidders, each of whom perceives that valuations are uniformly distributed between $100 and $1,000. One of the bidders is Sue, who knows her own valuation is $200. What is Sue's optimal bidding strategy in a Dutch auction?
PJ has been owning a City Golf, model 2004 for the past 15 years and now plans to sell it. Town auctioneers has offered to sell his car at their next auction. This is the first time PJ is hearing at an auction.
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Chapter 17 Solutions
Microeconomics, Student Value Edition (2nd Edition)
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- Consider the following situation: five individuals are participating in an auction for an old bicycle used by a famous cyclist. The table below provides the bidders' valuations of the cycle. The auctioneer starts the bid at an offer price far above the bidders' values and lowers the price in increments until one of the bidders accepts the offer. Bidder Value ($) Roberto 750 Claudia 700 Mario 650 Bradley 600 Michelle 550 What is the optimal strategy of each player in this case? Who will win the auction if each bidder places his or her optimal bid? If Claudia wins the auction, how much surplus will she earn?arrow_forwardUse the expected value information to illustrate how having more bidders in an oral auction will likely result in a higher winning bid.arrow_forwardWhat is Revenue Equivalence Theorem for the standard auction types?arrow_forward
- Explain the differce between oral auctions and second-price auctionsarrow_forwardHello, please help me to solve this question in Game Theory. Thanks in advance!Consider a first price sealed-bid auction of an object with two bidders. Each bidder i’s valuation of the object is vi, which is known to both bidders. The auction rules are that each player submits a bid in a sealed envelope. The envelopes are then opened, and the bidder who has submitted the highest bid gets the object and pays the auctioneer the amount of his bid. If the bidders submit the same bid, each gets the object with probability 0.5. Bids must be integers. Find a Nash equilibrium for this game and show whether it is unique.arrow_forwardConsider a Common Value auction with two bidders who both receive a signal X that is uniformly distributed between 0 and 1. The (common) value V of the good the players are bidding for is the average of the two signals, i.e. V = (X1+X2)/2. the symmetric Nash equilibrium bidding strategy for the second-price sealed-bid auction assuming that players are risk-neutral and have standard selfish preferences. Furthermore, you may assume that the other bidder is following a linear bidding strategy. Make sure to explain your notation and the steps you take to derive the result.arrow_forward
- Explain why a player in a sealed-bid, second-price auction would never submit a bid that exceeds his or her true value of the object being sold. (Hint: What if all players submitted bids greater than their valuations of the object?)arrow_forwardConsider a Common Value auction with two bidders who both receive a signal X that is uniformly distributed between 0 and 1. The (common) value V of the good the players are bidding for is the average of the two signals, i.e. V = (X1+X2)/2. Compute the symmetric Nash equilibrium bidding strategy for the second-price sealed-bid auction assuming that players are risk-neutral and have standard selfish preferences. Furthermore, you may assume that the other bidder is following a linear bidding strategy. Make sure to explain your notation and the steps you take to derive the result.arrow_forwardIn a first-price auction, bidding one’s valuation weakly dominates bidding any higher real numberarrow_forward
- Suppose there is a second price sealed bid auction in which the players have the following values: v1=15, v2=4, v3=6, v4=8, v5=10, v6=6. In the symmetric equilibrium, what bid will bidder 4 submit? a. 10 b. 15 c. 4 d. 8arrow_forwardSee attachments for question context. Question: Some people advocated the following modifiction of the auction rule. A bidder cannot bid for only one object, i.e., if at some point in time he withdraws from the bidding race for one object, he automatically withdraws the race for the other object. Every other aspect of the auction, including how prices increase over time, does not change. What should a bidder do if his valuation for the two objects are 50 and 60, respectively? Explain. Does the auction lead to an efficient allocation? Explain.arrow_forward
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