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The experimental evaluation of (contractual solutions to) the holdup problem

The experimental evaluation of (contractual solutions to) the holdup problem. Randolph Sloof Amsterdam School of Economics. Focus of this workshop. Focus on one particular topic: the holdup under-investment problem

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The experimental evaluation of (contractual solutions to) the holdup problem

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  1. The experimental evaluation of (contractual solutions to) the holdup problem Randolph Sloof Amsterdam School of Economics

  2. Focus of this workshop • Focus on one particular topic: the holdup under-investment problem • Focus (predominantly) on one research tool: controlled laboratory experiments

  3. Key ingredients of holdup problem • Specificity of the investment • Incomplete contracts • Allows for renegotiation • Classic example: GM and Fisher bodies (see Klein et al., 1978)

  4. Relevance of holdup • Boundaries of the firm / vertical integration • TCE: Coase, Williamson … • Property rights theory: Hart, Grossman, Moore ... • Human capital acquisition • General vs. specific training: Becker, MacLeod, Malcomson … • …

  5. Empirical evidence on holdup • Evidence based on field data scarce or indirect • Crude measure of the size of the specific investment / “appropriable quasi-rent”; e.g. Malcomson (1999) provide rough estimates of firms’ recruitment, exit and training costs: “Incomplete as they are, the figures certainly indicate the existence of turnover costs and, hence, the potential relevance of holdup.” (p. 2313)

  6. Empirical evidence on holdup (II) • Evidence based on field data scarce or indirect • Asset specificity appears positive determinant of vertical integration in a number of TCE studies • But does not necessarily imply that asset specificity increases transaction costs of non-integration (i.e. holdup); transaction costs could decrease to greater extent under integration (Gibbons, 2005, p. 221) • High wage returns to training suggest underinvestment • But estimates are much smaller when you correct for selectivity bias (Leuven and Oosterbeek, 2007)

  7. Problems with field data • Direct field data evidence on holdup is difficult to obtain: • Root of the problem is non-verifiability of the specific investment; investment is difficult to objectively measure and observe • Assessment of the extent of holdup problem requires counterfactual information (e.g. what would have been a worker’s productivity without investment in training)

  8. Controlled laboratory experiment • “…Create a manageable microeconomic environment in the lab in which real people participate for real and substantial profits…” (Plott, Smith) • Adequate control and accurate measurement of relevant variables • Institutional rules are set by experimenter (and no deception!) • Induced valuation: decisions determine monetary payoffs

  9. Remainder of talk • Sketch some experiments on holdup and solutions to it: • Promotion policies within firms • Privacy rights / informational rents • (Elaborate contracts that create ‘attractive’ outside option) • Implications and limitations

  10. Promotion rules and skills acquisition • Up-or-out promotion policy provides strong incentives to invest in firm-specific skills and may therefore solve the holdup problem • It comes at a cost by wasting acquired skills of people not promoted • There may be a mismatch between the matching and incentive motive of promotions • Alternative: up-or-stay • Choice between up-or-out and up-or-stay represents tradeoff between inefficient matching and inefficient investments in skills acquisition

  11. An experimental test setup: does the tradeoff exist? • Two agents: firm and worker • Worker is either of low or high productivity, but type is unknown at start of the relationship (and not verifiable) • Investment stage: • During probation period worker can make investment of 25, to increase the probability that he is of high productivity from ¼ to ¾ • ‘Bargaining’ stage: • After worker’s productivity becomes known, firm can offer worker one of two jobs, or fire the worker • Difficult job pays wage equal to wd=110, easy job wage we • Worker decides whether to accept the firm’s job offer or not • Neutral framing in experiment, 30 rounds, random matching, fixed roles

  12. Production environment 100 points = 1 euro • Efficient matching: • Low prod. worker  Easy job • High prod. worker  Difficult job • Efficient to invest: (¾–¼)·(220–100) = 60 > 25

  13. First best not attainable • Firm must have incentive to: • Keep Low type in easy job: we < 100 • promote High type to difficult job: • 220 – 110 > 175 – we we > 65 • Given promotion of high type, worker must have incentive to invest: • Low is fired: (¾–¼)·(110 – 0) = 55 > 25 if we > 100 • Low is kept: (¾–¼)·(110 – we) > 25  we < 60

  14. % of efficient decisions † Single insignificant difference (=0.05)

  15. Up-or-out (we=110) • In experiment, 19% of low types is offered easy job • For low types that did not invest this is 3% • For low types that invested this is 27% • Reciprocity: willingness to sacrifice in order to reward or punish • Positive reciprocity by the firm occurs, but not often given that it is cheap • Overall surplus realized = 135 < 140 = predicted

  16. Up-or-stay (we=70) • In experiment, 8% of low types are dismissed • For low types that did not invest this is 2% • For low types that invested this is 9% • This negative reciprocity by the firm rationalizes investment • Overall surplus realized = 140 > 130 = predicted

  17. Main experimental findings (I) • Support for comparative statics predictions…: • under up-or-out more investment, so holdup (underinvestment) problem is mitigated; • under up-or-out more inefficient dismissals, so up-or-out comes at the cost of wasting skills; • under stay-or-stay less promotions

  18. Main experimental findings (II) • …but contracts differ in the extent to which they give scope for reciprocity • Reciprocity: refers to the motivation to reward kind actions of others and punish unkind ones • up-or-out: almost no scope for reciprocity • up-or-stay: negative reciprocal reaction of firm increases efficiency; punish non-investment • As a result, up-or-stay more efficient than up-or-out • For reciprocity mechanism to work, investment must be observable

  19. Holdup and investment (un)observability • Theory: holdup occurs because investor does not have full bargaining power: • Private information about e.g. the investment made (or outside options) may allow the investor to obtain an informational rent; • Through this informational rent, the investor captures a larger (marginal) return on investment; • Privacy rights may thus be used to boost investment incentives

  20. Gul (2001, Ecometrica) “…[one] objective of this paper is to emphasize the role of allocation of information as a tool in dealing with the hold-up problem. Audits, disclosure rules or privacy rights could be used to optimize the allocation of rents and guarantee the desired level of investment. Controlling the flow of information in organizations may prove to be a worthy alternative to controlling bargaining power in designing optimal organizations” (p. 344) • Here other controls of bargaining power refer to (p. 360): • allocation of ownership rights • detailed specification of non-cooperative renegotiation game

  21. Crowding out • Many lab experiments (e.g. trust game of Berg et al., 1995) find that holdup is alleviated by fairness and reciprocity motivations • Private information may interfere with informal reciprocity mechanism when it becomes impossible to observe whether the investor behaved ‘kind’ or not • Private information about investment made • Informational rent  investment  • Obstruction of reciprocity mechanism  investment  • Net effect ??  experiment of Sloof et al. (2007, JEMS)

  22. An experimental test setup: Does unobservability boost investments? • Two stage game between buyer and seller • Investment stage: Buyer chooses between pie of 50, or pie of 130 at costs C (with C{20,40,60}) • ‘Bargaining’ stage: Seller chooses price demand P [0,130]. Trade takes place at this price iff P  actual pie. • Two types of sessions: • Obs: Buyer’s choice is observable • Unobs: Buyer’s choice unobservable • Neutral framing, 36 (6 x 6) rounds, C varied within sessions, random matching within matching groups, switching roles

  23. Standard theory • Unobservable treatment: equiv. to simultaneous move game • Unique mixed strategy NE: iun = Pr(Invest) = 50/130  0.385 C{20,40,60} • Observable treatment: unique SPE has iobs = Pr(Invest) = 0 •  iun– iobs > 0 and independent of investment costs C

  24. Social preferences • Using model of intention-based reciprocity a la Rabin (see paper) or inequality-aversion a la Fehr-Schmidt (see earlier WP version, or Ewerhart (2006)): • Scope for these motivational factors is large when investment costs C are low relative to the return on investment (130 – 50 = 80) • With large scope, iobs is high (iobs 1), just like iun is • With large scope, i.e. low C, private information thus has no impact  iun iobs when C is low and iun> iobs for C is high

  25. Mean investment levels (rounds 19-36) • Investment levels in line with social preferences predictions • For low C motivational crowding out • For high C private information boosts investment incentives • Investment levels decrease with C (scope for reciprocity )

  26. Main conclusions this study • Unobservability does boost investment incentives, but only when there is limited scope for fairness and reciprocity • Scope is limited when the profitability of the investment is low (C is close to the gross return of 80) • With sufficient scope for these motivations, crowding out of informal reciprocity mechanism • Social preferences have a larger impact on investment incentives when the investment is observable

  27. Holdup and the outside option principle • The exact form of the post-investment bargaining stage determines the marginal returns on investment • Intuitive theoretical idea: use contracts to effectively re-structure the ex post bargaining process, such that investor becomes residual claimant • Create a binding ‘outside’ option endogenously through the initial contract; e.g. a one-sided option to extend the contract • In an abstract experiment you can test the underlying mechanism

  28. Outside option principle Investor • Outside option s of Other acts as constraint on division • Other gets: • max {5000+50·I, S} • Investor gets: • min {5000+50·I, 10,000–S+100·I} • S high: investor gets full return on investment 100·I 10,000     S=3000 S=9000 Other

  29. Experimental setup • Two stage game between buyer and seller • Investment stage: Buyer chooses investment I in between 0 and 80, at investment costs I2 • Bargaining stage: Multiple-pie alternating-offer bargaining game for 10 rounds, buyer makes first offer, as responder you can opt out • Two types of treatments: • S=3000: Buyer is predicted to under-invest (25 < 50) • S=9000: Buyer is predicted to invest efficiently (50) • Comparing treatments, investment should increase with S • Neutral framing, 20 (4 x 5) rounds, S varied within sessions, random matching within matching groups, fixed roles

  30. Mean investment levels (rounds 11-20) • Investment levels do not vary with S • Holdup occurs for both values of S • For S=3000 buyers overinvest from a selfish point of view (given actual bargaining outcomes)

  31. Main conclusions this study • No support for predicted relationship between investment incentives and outside option principle • Potential explanation: self-serving bias of buyer lead them to ask for (and to feel entitled to) almost the full return on investment, independent of S • For low S this demand is not honoured, therefore overinvestment in this case • No support for underlying mechanism: casts doubts on contractual solutions that rely on this

  32. Main conclusions general • Underinvestment typically much less of a problem than theory predicts • In the lab subjects typically behave less opportunistically; fairness and reciprocity motivations play a role • Some suggested solutions do alleviate holdup, but less so than predicted

  33. Potential criticisms • Laboratory is an artificial setting, in reality people will behave differently because e.g.: • Higher stakes: but fairness and reciprocity play important role in high stake lab experiments as well (Camerer, 2003) • In reality decisions are not taken by students: yet lab tests of subject pool effects indicate that professionals are also motivated by fairness / reciprocity (Fehr and List, 2004) • In reality personal interaction and communication: lab experiments show that promises and threats alleviate holdup (Ellingsen and Johannesson, 2004)

  34. External validity • Many ‘external validity’ issues can be pre-tested in the lab • But in the end, verification by means of field data is needed: • Field experiments to directly verify lab results • e.g. Gneezy and List (2006) and Falk (2007) examine gift exchange in the field • but this may be difficult for holdup • Incorporate insights from the lab into field studies • Leuven et al. (2005) on worker reciprocity and employer investment in training

  35. Importance of reciprocity in practice • Reciprocity may provide implicit commitment and limit opportunism • Reciprocal workers may abstain from bargaining for a wage increase (or abstain from quitting) after the firm has invested in their skills • Firms may therefore be more willing to pay for training of those workers who are reciprocal • 2001 survey among 3127 dutch employees • Info about participation in (firm-sponsored) training • Include question to measure reciprocity motivations

  36. Reciprocity question • “If someone does something that is beneficial to you, would you be prepared to return a favour, even when this was not agreed upon in advance?” • Not at all (1%) • No (3.3%) Low • Maybe (9.1%) • Yes (60.8%) Medium • Certainly yes (25.8%) High

  37. Training participation rates by reciprocity type * Significantly different (1% level, ranksum tests) • Same conclusion follows when controlling for personal and firm characteristics in a probit analysis

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