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Library Effective Use of Limited Information: Do Bid Maximums Reduce Procurement Cost in Asymmetric Auctions

Effective Use of Limited Information: Do Bid Maximums Reduce Procurement Cost in Asymmetric Auctions

Effective Use of Limited Information: Do Bid Maximums Reduce Procurement Cost in Asymmetric Auctions

Resource information

Date of publication
December 2010
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
AGRIS:US201301891051
Pages
288-304

Conservation programs faced with limited budgets often use a competitive enrollment mechanism. Goals of enrollment might include minimizing program expenditures, encouraging broad participation, and inducing adoption of enhanced environmental practices. We use experimental methods to evaluate an auction mechanism that incorporates bid maximums and quality adjustments. We examine this mechanism’s performance characteristics when opportunity costs are heterogeneous across potential participants, and when costs are only approximately known by the purchaser. We find that overly stringent maximums can increase overall expenditures, and that when quality of offers is important, substantial increases in offer maximums can yield a better quality-adjusted result.

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Hellerstein, Daniel
Higgins, Nathaniel

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