The Economics Book

(Barry) #1

294


AUCTION


WINNERS PAY


OVER THE ODDS


THE WINNER’S CURSE


A


uctions have been
around for a long time,
but economists have only
recently come to realize that they
are an ideal proving ground for the
competitive strategies of game
theory. Game theory came to
prominence in the 1950s when
mathematicians saw that simple
games could illuminate situations
in which people compete directly.
This idea proved hard to apply to
the real world. However, the strict
rules of an auction, with limited
participants and pokerlike buying
strategies, seemed much closer to
the theory.

Types of auction
The first person to apply game
theory to auctions was Canadian
economist William Vickrey in the
1960s. He compared the three most
common types of auctions. An
“English auction” is the method
used in British art houses, where
bidding goes up until only one
bidder is left. In a “Dutch auction,”
used in Dutch flower markets for
example, the price drops until it
reaches a price someone will pay.
In a “first-price auction” bidders
submit sealed bids, and the highest
bidder wins. Vickrey proposed a

IN CONTEXT


FOCUS
Decision making

KEY THINKERS
William Vickrey (1914 –96)
Paul Milgrom (1948– )
Roger Myerson (1951– )

BEFORE
1951 US mathematician
John Nash develops a concept
of equilibrium in games,
which becomes a tenet of
auction theory.

1961 Canadian economist
William Vickrey uses game
theory to analyze auctions.

AFTER
1971 It is shown that oil
companies bidding for drilling
leases may not be aware of the
“winner’s curse.”

1982 US economists Paul
Milgrom and Robert J. Weber
show that when bidders know
their competitors’ valuations,
an “English auction” gives the
best price for the seller.

Auction winners pay
over the odds.

In an auction where the value
of the sale item is uncertain,
every bidder makes his own
decision on its value.

If they decide their
valuations privately,
there will be a range of
different valuations.

The true value of the item
will tend to be around the
midrange of the different
bidders’ valuations.

The sale will go to the
bidder who overestimates
its value the most.
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